# | Rank | Similarity | Title + Abs. | Year | PMID |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
| 415 | 0 | 1.0000 | Mobilization of plasmid-borne drug resistance determinants for transfer from Pseudomonas aeruginosa to Escherichia coli. RSU2, a plasmid transmissible between strains of P. aeruginosa but not to Escherichia coli can be mobilized by R751. Conjugatants receive a single plasmid composed of DNA from both R751 and RSU2 which has the compatibility properties of a member of group P (like R751). Study of this fusion plasmid suggests that the failure of RSU2 to transfer into enterobacteria is due to an inability to replicate in these bacteria. The fusion plasmid replicates using the genes of R751. | 1975 | 127114 |
| 379 | 1 | 0.9992 | Broad host range DNA cloning system for gram-negative bacteria: construction of a gene bank of Rhizobium meliloti. A broad host range cloning vehicle that can be mobilized at high frequency into Gram-negative bacteria has been constructed from the naturally occurring antibiotic resistance plasmid RK2. The vehicle is 20 kilobase pairs in size, encodes tetracycline resistance, and contains two single restriction enzyme sites suitable for cloning. Mobilization is effected by a helper plasmid consisting of the RK2 transfer genes linked to a ColE1 replicon. By use of this plasmid vehicle, a gene bank of the DNA from a wild-type strain of Rhizobium meliloti has been constructed and established in Escherichia coli. One of the hybrid plasmids in the bank contains a DNA insert of approximately 26 kilobase pairs which has homology to the nitrogenase structural gene region of Klebsiella pneumoniae. | 1980 | 7012838 |
| 361 | 2 | 0.9992 | Plasmid transfer from Escherichia coli to Bacteroides fragilis: differential expression of antibiotic resistance phenotypes. A unique shuttle plasmid, pDP1, has been constructed to mediate gene transfer between Escherichia coli and the Gram-negative anaerobe Bacteroides fragilis. pDP1 contains the pBR322 replicon and the Bacteroides clindamycin resistance plasmid pCP1 linked to the transfer origin of the broad host range plasmid RK2. pDP1 can be transferred from E. coli to B. fragilis by the RK2 conjugation system even though RK2 itself is not maintained in the Bacteroides recipients. The antibiotic resistance and replication functions of pDP1 have been mapped by deletion analysis, and a 5-kilobase portion of the plasmid has been identified as the essential region for maintenance in Bacteroides. Comparison of the resistance conferred by pDP1 on E. coli and B. fragilis shows that antibiotic resistance genes are expressed differently in aerobic and anaerobic bacteria. These results document the feasibility of gene transfer from E. coli to B. fragilis and demonstrate the usefulness of this conjugation system to study genetic structure and expression in Bacteroides. | 1984 | 6095273 |
| 387 | 3 | 0.9992 | Expression of tetracycline resistance in pBR322 derivatives reduces the reproductive fitness of plasmid-containing Escherichia coli. Plasmid pBR322 and its numerous derivatives are used extensively for research and in biotechnology. The tetracycline-resistance (TcR) genes in these plasmids are expressed constitutively and cells carrying these plasmids are resistant to tetracycline. We have shown that expression of the TcR gene has an adverse effect on the reproductive fitness of plasmid-containing bacteria in both glucose-limited batch and chemostat cultures. If the TcR genes are inactivated at any one of three different restriction sites, mixed cultures of plasmid-free and plasmid-containing bacteria grow at the same rate. | 1985 | 3005111 |
| 425 | 4 | 0.9992 | A novel ColV plasmid encoding type IV pili. Many septicaemic Escherichia coli strains harbour ColV virulence plasmids. This paper describes pO78V, a conjugative ColV plasmid from an avian pathogenic E. coli strain that encodes type IV pili in addition to other virulence-related genes and tetracycline resistance. Plasmid location of type IV pili genes was demonstrated using Southern hybridization and expression of the pili was demonstrated using RT-PCR and phage sensitivity assays. This is a first report of a ColV plasmid encoding type IV pili. Plasmid pO78V is a mosaic plasmid containing replicons and other genes typical to both IncI1 and IncFII groups. As type IV pili of Gram-negative bacteria are involved in several stages of infection, their presence on a ColV virulence plasmid could expand the repertoire of pathogenesis-related genes. | 2003 | 12576591 |
| 420 | 5 | 0.9991 | Transferable nitrofuran resistance conferred by R-plasmids in clinical isolates of Escherichia coli. A high proportion of nitrofuran-resistant strains has been found in a collection of antibiotic-resistant Gram-negative bacteria isolated from patients with urinary tract infections. Some of the Escherichia coli carried R-plasmids that conferred resistance to nitrofurantoin and nitrofurazone. The mechanism of resistance is not clear; only in lactose non-fermenting recipients was there a decrease in the nitrofuran-reducing ability of whole-cell suspensions. One of the plasmids conferred enhanced resistance to UV light on DNA repair defective mutants but not on repair efficient strains. In some resistant strains, the total resistance was apparently the result of a combination of chromosomal and plasmid-borne genes. The presence of the plasmid may allow the development of higher resistance levels by mutation of chromosomal genes. | 1983 | 6368515 |
| 416 | 6 | 0.9991 | Characterization of In0 of Pseudomonas aeruginosa plasmid pVS1, an ancestor of integrons of multiresistance plasmids and transposons of gram-negative bacteria. Many multiresistance plasmids and transposons of gram-negative bacteria carry related DNA elements that appear to have evolved from a common ancestor by site-specific integration of discrete cassettes containing antibiotic resistance genes or sequences of unknown function. The site of integration is flanked by conserved segments coding for an integraselike protein and for sulfonamide resistance, respectively. These segments, together with the antibiotic resistance genes between them, have been termed integrons (H. W. Stokes and R. M. Hall, Mol. Microbiol. 3:1669-1683, 1989). We report here the characterization of an integron, In0, from Pseudomonas aeruginosa plasmid pVS1, which has an unoccupied integration site and hence may be an ancestor of more complex integrons. Codon usage of the integrase (int) and sulfonamide resistance (sul1) genes carried by this integron suggests a common origin. This contrasts with the codon usage of other antibiotic resistance genes that were presumably integrated later as cassettes during the evolution and spread of these DNA elements. We propose evolutionary schemes for (i) the genesis of the integrons by the site-specific integration of antibiotic resistance genes and (ii) the evolution of the integrons of multiresistance plasmids and transposons, in relation to the evolution of transposons related to Tn21. | 1992 | 1310501 |
| 9865 | 7 | 0.9991 | A plasmid-encoded mobile genetic element from Pseudomonas aeruginosa that confers heavy metal resistance and virulence. Mobile plasmid-encoded elements are DNA segments that are transferred for horizontal gene transfer and that confer adaptive proprieties, as well as virulence and antibiotic and heavy metal resistance to bacteria. The conjugative plasmid pUM505, isolated from a clinical strain of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, possesses a putative 31.292 kb mobile element (denominated Mpe: Mobile plasmid- encoded element) that, in addition to possessing chr genes that confer chromate resistance to Pseudomonas, contains two putative mer operons that could confer mercury resistance. Moreover, the Mpe contains genes related previously with the virulence of both P. aeruginosa and Escherichia coli strains. In this work, we determined that Mpe from pUM505 was able to independently move to another DNA molecule, conferring chromate and mercury resistance to P. aeruginosa PAO1 and mercury resistance to E. coli JM101, suggesting that its transference might be beneficial to bacteria under certain environmental conditions. Additionally, the transference of Mpe increased the virulence of P. aeruginosa PAO1 against the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, suggesting its contribution to the pathogenicity of P. aeruginosa. In this work, we describe a new mobile plasmid-encoded element that possesses the potential to be transferred by horizontal gene transference, which could provide bacteria with a wide variety of adaptive traits such as heavy metal resistance and virulence, which can be selective factors for the distribution and prevalence of this plasmid in diverse environments, including hospitals and heavy metal contaminated soils. | 2018 | 30063910 |
| 422 | 8 | 0.9991 | Further characterization of complement resistance conferred on Escherichia coli by the plasmid genes traT of R100 and iss of ColV,I-K94. We have shown that the traT gene product was responsible for the complement resistance of the R100 plasmid. We compared this resistance with that specified by the iss gene of the ColV,I-K94 plasmid. The levels of resistance specified by the two genes were similar, and there was no additive effect on resistance when both genes were present together. Under conditions in which traT and iss conferred at least a 50- and 10-fold increase in survival, respectively, the consumption of C6, C7, C8, and C9 was the same for bacteria with and without the plasmid genes. This result indicated that it was the action of the terminal complex, not its formation, which was blocked by traT and iss. | 1982 | 7035371 |
| 409 | 9 | 0.9991 | A Novel Plasmid Entry Exclusion System in pKPC_UVA01, a Promiscuous Conjugative Plasmid Carrying the bla(KPC) Carbapenemase Gene. Conjugative plasmids are the principal mediator in the emergence and spread of antibiotic resistance genes in Enterobacterales. Plasmid entry exclusion (EEX) systems can restrict their transfer into the recipient bacteria carrying closely related plasmids. In this study, we identified and characterized a novel plasmid entry exclusion system in a carbapenem resistance plasmid pKPC_UVA01, which is responsible for widespread dissemination of the bla(KPC) carbapenemase gene among Enterobacterales in the United States. The identified eex gene in the recipient strain of different Enterobacterales species inhibited the conjugation transfer of pKPC_UVA01 plasmids at a range of 200- to 400-fold, and this inhibition was found to be a dose-dependent function of the EEX protein in recipient cells. The C terminus truncated version of eex or eex with an early termination codon at the C terminus region alleviated the inhibition of conjugative transfer. Unlike the strict specificity of plasmid exclusion by the known EEX protein, the newly identified EEX in the recipient strain could inhibit the transfer of IncP and IncN plasmids. The eex gene from the plasmid pKPC_UVA01 was not required for conjugative transfer but was essential in the donor bacteria for entry exclusion of this plasmid. This was a novel function of a single protein that is essential in both donor and recipient bacteria for the entry exclusion of a plasmid. This eex gene is found to be distributed in multidrug resistance plasmids similar to pKPC_UVA01 in different Enterobacterales species and may contribute to the stability of this plasmid type by controlling its transfer. | 2022 | 35007138 |
| 9829 | 10 | 0.9991 | Promiscuous transfer of drug resistance in gram-negative bacteria. Bacterial conjugation is a major mechanism for the spread of antibiotic-resistance genes in pathogenic organisms. In gram-negative bacteria, broad-host-range drug-resistance plasmids mediate genetic exchange between many unrelated species. The mechanism of conjugation encoded by the broad-host-range IncP plasmid RK2 has been studied in detail. The location and sequence of the transfer origin of RK2 has been determined. Several barriers limit plasmid transfer between unrelated bacteria: interactions at the cell surface may prevent effective mating contact, restriction systems may degrade foreign DNA, or the plasmid may not replicate in the new host. RK2 has evolved specific mechanisms by which it overcomes these barriers; this plasmid can mediate the transfer of resistance to most gram-negative bacteria. | 1984 | 6143782 |
| 4499 | 11 | 0.9991 | Organization of two sulfonamide resistance genes on plasmids of gram-negative bacteria. The organization of two widely distributed sulfonamide resistance genes has been studied. The type I gene was linked to other resistance genes, like streptomycin resistance in R100 and trimethoprim resistance in R388 and other recently isolated plasmids from Sri Lanka. In R388, the sulfonamide resistance gene was transcribed from a promoter of its own, but in all other studied plasmids the linked genes were transcribed from a common promoter. This was especially established with a clone derived from plasmid R6-5, in which transposon mutagenesis showed that expression of sulfonamide resistance was completely dependent on the linked streptomycin resistance gene. The type II sulfonamide resistance gene was independently transcribed and found on two kinds of small resistance plasmids and also on large plasmids isolated from clinical material. | 1987 | 3032095 |
| 426 | 12 | 0.9991 | Plasmid-determined resistance to serum bactericidal activity: a major outer membrane protein, the traT gene product, is responsible for plasmid-specified serum resistance in Escherichia coli. Resistance to the bactericidal activity of serum appears to be an important virulence property of invasive bacteria. The conjugative multiple-antibiotic-resistance plasmid R6-5 was found to confer upon Escherichia coli host bacteria increased resistance against rabbit serum. Gene-cloning techniques were used to localize the serum resistance determinant of R6-5 to a segment of the plasmid that encodes conjugal transfer functions, and a pACYC184 hybrid plasmid, designated pKT107, that contains this segment was constructed. The generation and analysis of deletion and insertion mutant derivatives of the pKT107 plasmid that no longer specify serum resistance permitted precise localization of the serum-resistance cistron on the R6-5 map and demonstrated that this locus is coincident with that of traT, one of the two surface exclusion genes of R6-5. Examination of the proteins synthesized in E. coli minicells of pKT107 and its serum-sensitive mutant derivative plasmids confirmed that the serum-resistance gene product of R6-5 is the traT protein and showed that this protein is a major structural component (about 21,000 copies per cell) of the bacterial outer membrane. | 1980 | 6995306 |
| 9821 | 13 | 0.9990 | Mercury resistance (mer) operons in enterobacteria. Mercury resistance is found in many genera of bacteria. Common amongst enterobacteria are transposons related to Tn21, which is both mercuric ion- and streptomycin-/spectinomycin- and sulphonamide-resistant. Other Tn21-related transposons often have different antibiotic resistances compared with Tn21, but share many non-antibiotic-resistance genes with it. In this article we discuss possible mechanisms for the evolution of Tn21 and related genetic elements. | 2002 | 12196175 |
| 4530 | 14 | 0.9990 | Novel conjugative transferable multiple drug resistance plasmid pAQU1 from Photobacterium damselae subsp. damselae isolated from marine aquaculture environment. The emergence of drug-resistant bacteria is a severe problem in aquaculture. The ability of drug resistance genes to transfer from a bacterial cell to another is thought to be responsible for the wide dissemination of these genes in the aquaculture environment; however, little is known about the gene transfer mechanisms in marine bacteria. In this study, we show that a tetracycline-resistant strain of Photobacterium damselae subsp. damselae, isolated from seawater at a coastal aquaculture site in Japan, harbors a novel multiple drug resistance plasmid. This plasmid named pAQU1 can be transferred to Escherichia coli by conjugation. Nucleotide sequencing showed that the plasmid was 204,052 base pairs and contained 235 predicted coding sequences. Annotation showed that pAQU1 did not have known repA, suggesting a new replicon, and contained seven drug resistance genes: bla(CARB-9)-like, floR, mph(A)-like, mef(A)-like, sul2, tet(M) and tet(B). The plasmid has a complete set of genes encoding the apparatus for the type IV secretion system with a unique duplication of traA. Phylogenetic analysis of the deduced amino acid sequence of relaxase encoded by traI in pAQU1 demonstrated that the conjugative transfer system of the plasmid belongs to MOB(H12), a sub-group of the MOB(H) plasmid family, closely related to the IncA/C type of plasmids and SXT/R391 widely distributed among species of Enterobacteriaceae and Vibrionaceae. Our data suggest that conjugative transfer is involved in horizontal gene transfer among marine bacteria and provide useful insights into the molecular basis for the dissemination of drug resistance genes among bacteria in the aquaculture environment. | 2012 | 22446310 |
| 4462 | 15 | 0.9990 | Molecular characterization of an antibiotic resistance gene cluster of Salmonella typhimurium DT104. Salmonella typhimurium phage type DT104 has become an important emerging pathogen. Isolates of this phage type often possess resistance to ampicillin, chloramphenicol, streptomycin, sulfonamides, and tetracycline (ACSSuT resistance). The mechanism by which DT104 has accumulated resistance genes is of interest, since these genes interfere with treatment of DT104 infections and might be horizontally transferred to other bacteria, even to unrelated organisms. Previously, several laboratories have shown that the antibiotic resistance genes of DT104 are chromosomally encoded and involve integrons. The antibiotic resistance genes conferring the ACSSuT-resistant phenotype have been cloned and sequenced. These genes are grouped within two district integrons and intervening plasmid-derived sequences. This sequence is potentially useful for detection of multiresistant DT104. | 1999 | 10103189 |
| 432 | 16 | 0.9990 | Repressor gene finO in plasmids R100 and F: constitutive transfer of plasmid F is caused by insertion of IS3 into F finO. Fertility factor F confers bacterial conjugation, a process which involves at least 20 tra genes. Resistance plasmids such as R100, R6-5, and R1 have homology with F in the tra region. Conjugal transfer of these plasmids is, however, repressed, while transfer of F is constitutive. Repression of R transfer is due to the existence of the two genes, called finO and finP; constitutive transfer of F is believed to be due to a lack of finO in F. In this paper, we report the identification and DNA sequence of the finO gene of R100, encoding a protein of 21,265 daltons. We show that F does actually encode finO, but the gene has been inactivated by insertion of IS3. Lederberg and Tatum (Nature [London] 158:558, 1946), who discovered sexuality in bacteria, may have had an Escherichia coli K-12 strain harboring such an finO F factor, which facilitated the generation of recombinant progeny useful for genetic analysis of bacteria and established the foundation for molecular genetics. | 1987 | 3027040 |
| 4465 | 17 | 0.9990 | Genetic analyses of sulfonamide resistance and its dissemination in gram-negative bacteria illustrate new aspects of R plasmid evolution. In contrast to what has been observed for many other antibiotic resistance mechanisms, there are only two known genes encoding plasmid-borne sulfonamide resistance. Both genes, sulI and sulII, encode a drug-resistant dihydropteroate synthase enzyme. In members of the family Enterobacteriaceae isolated from several worldwide sources, plasmid-mediated resistance to sulfonamides could be identified by colony hybridization as being encoded by sulI, sulII, or both. The sulI gene was in all cases found to be located in the newly defined, mobile genetic element, recently named an integron, which has been shown to contain a site-specific recombination system for the integration of various antibiotic resistance genes. The sulII gene was almost exclusively found as part of a variable resistance region on small, nonconjugative plasmids. Colony hybridization to an intragenic probe, restriction enzyme digestion, and nucleotide sequence analysis of small plasmids indicated that the sulII gene and contiguous sequences represent an independently occurring region disseminated in the bacterial population. The sulII resistance region was bordered by direct repeats, which in some plasmids were totally or partially deleted. The prevalence of sulI and sulII could thus be accounted for by their stable integration in transposons and in plasmids that are widely disseminated among gram-negative bacteria. | 1991 | 1952855 |
| 430 | 18 | 0.9990 | Cloning and characterization of EcoRI and HindIII restriction endonuclease-generated fragments of antibiotic resistance plasmids R6-5 and R6. DNA fragments generated by the EcoRI of HindIII endonucleases from the low copy number antibiotic resistance plasmids R6 and R6-5 were separately cloned using the high copy number ColE1 or pML21 plasmid vectors and the insertional inactivation procedure. The hybrid plasmids that were obtained were used to determine the location of the EcoRI and HindIII cleavage sites on the parent plasmid genomes by means of electron microscope heteroduplex analysis and agarose gel electrophoresis. Ultracentrifugation of the cloned fragments in caesium chloride gradients localized the high buoyant density regions of R6-5 to fragments that carry the genes for resistance to streptomycin-spectinomycin, sulfonamide, and mercury and a low buoyant density region to fragments that carry the tetracycline resistance determinant. Functional analysis of hybrid plasmids localized a number of plasmid properties such as resistances to antibiotics and mercury and several replication functions to specific regions of the R6-5 genome. Precise localisation of the genes for resistance to chloramphenicol, kanamycin, fusidic acid and tetracycline was possible due to the presence of identified restriction endonuclease cleavage sites within these determinants. Only one region competent for autonomous replication was identified on the R6-5 plasmid genome and this was localized to EcoRI fragment 2 and HindIII fragment 1. However, two additional regions of replication activity designated RepB and RepC, themselves incapable of autonomous replication but capable supporting replication of a linked ColE1 plasmid in polA- bacteria, were also identified. | 1978 | 672900 |
| 358 | 19 | 0.9990 | Resistance factors in anaerobic bacteria. Resistance transfer factors have been described in both Bacteroides and clostridia. The clindamycin (Cln) resistance transfer factors from the Bacteroides fragilis group of organisms have been best studied, including our own plasmid pBFTM10. The clindamycin resistance determinant (Cln X) of pBFTM10 can be detected in 90% of Cln resistant Bacteroides isolated from dispersed geographical areas. This determinant can be located in the chromosome and on plasmids. Recent studies from our laboratory have shown that the Cln X genes of pBFTM 10 are carried on a compound transposon, Tn4400. Bacteroides plasmids have been cloned in Escherichia coli and shuttle vectors have been developed that allow transfers of DNA from E. coli back to B. fragilis, using the broad host range plasmid RK2 to supply essential conjugation functions. We have shown that shuttle vectors containing pBFTM 10 can be retransferred from B. fragilis back to E. coli. In addition, a tetracycline transfer element from B. fragilis strain TM230 is able to promote high frequency conjugation between B. fragilis and E. coli. The results of these investigations indicate that Bacteroides has efficient mechanisms to exchange genetic material and that genetic exchange can occur between Bacteroides and E. coli, which exist in intimate contact in the human colon. | 1986 | 3029859 |