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17800.9782Molecular basis of bacterial resistance to organomercurial and inorganic mercuric salts. Bacteria mediate resistance to organomercurial and inorganic mercuric salts by metabolic conversion to nontoxic elemental mercury, Hg(0). The genes responsible for mercury resistance are organized in the mer operon, and such operons are often found in plasmids that also bear drug resistance determinants. We have subcloned three of these mer genes, merR, merB, and merA, and have studied their protein products via protein overproduction and purification, and structural and functional characterization. MeR is a metalloregulatory DNA-binding protein that acts as a repressor of both its own and structural gene transcription in the absence of Hg(II); in addition it acts as a positive effector of structural gene transcription when Hg(II) is present. MerB, organomercury lyase, catalyzes the protonolytic fragmentation of organomercurials to the parent hydrocarbon and Hg(II) by an apparent SE2 mechanism. MerA, mercuric ion reductase, is an FAD-containing and redox-active disulfide-containing enzyme with homology to glutathione reductase. It has evolved the unique catalytic capacity to reduce Hg(II) to Hg(0) and thereby complete the detoxification scheme.19883277886
842110.9782Dynamic stepwise opening of integron attC DNA hairpins by SSB prevents toxicity and ensures functionality. Biologically functional DNA hairpins are found in archaea, prokaryotes and eukaryotes, playing essential roles in various DNA transactions. However, during DNA replication, hairpin formation can stall the polymerase and is therefore prevented by the single-stranded DNA binding protein (SSB). Here, we address the question how hairpins maintain their functional secondary structure despite SSB's presence. As a model hairpin, we used the recombinogenic form of the attC site, essential for capturing antibiotic-resistance genes in the integrons of bacteria. We found that attC hairpins have a conserved high GC-content near their apical loop that creates a dynamic equilibrium between attC fully opened by SSB and a partially structured attC-6-SSB complex. This complex is recognized by the recombinase IntI, which extrudes the hairpin upon binding while displacing SSB. We anticipate that this intriguing regulation mechanism using a base pair distribution to balance hairpin structure formation and genetic stability is key to the dissemination of antibiotic resistance genes among bacteria and might be conserved among other functional hairpins.201728985409
300120.9781IS26 and the IS26 family: versatile resistance gene movers and genome reorganizers. SUMMARYIn Gram-negative bacteria, the insertion sequence IS26 is highly active in disseminating antibiotic resistance genes. IS26 can recruit a gene or group of genes into the mobile gene pool and support their continued dissemination to new locations by creating pseudo-compound transposons (PCTs) that can be further mobilized by the insertion sequence (IS). IS26 can also enhance expression of adjacent potential resistance genes. IS26 encodes a DDE transposase but has unique properties. It forms cointegrates between two separate DNA molecules using two mechanisms. The well-known copy-in (replicative) route generates an additional IS copy and duplicates the target site. The recently discovered and more efficient and targeted conservative mechanism requires an IS in both participating molecules and does not generate any new sequence. The unit of movement for PCTs, known as a translocatable unit or TU, includes only one IS26. TU formed by homologous recombination between the bounding IS26s can be reincorporated via either cointegration route. However, the targeted conservative reaction is key to generation of arrays of overlapping PCTs seen in resistant pathogens. Using the copy-in route, IS26 can also act on a site in the same DNA molecule, either inverting adjacent DNA or generating an adjacent deletion plus a circular molecule carrying the DNA segment lost and an IS copy. If reincorporated, these circular molecules create a new PCT. IS26 is the best characterized IS in the IS26 family, which includes IS257/IS431, ISSau10, IS1216, IS1006, and IS1008 that are also implicated in spreading resistance genes in Gram-positive and Gram-negative pathogens.202438436262
54430.9776Organic Hydroperoxide Induces Prodigiosin Biosynthesis in Serratia sp. ATCC 39006 in an OhrR-Dependent Manner. The biosynthesis of prodigiosin in the model prodigiosin-producing strain, Serratia sp. ATCC 39006, is significantly influenced by environmental and cellular signals. However, a comprehensive regulatory mechanism for this process has not been well established. In the present study, we demonstrate that organic hydroperoxide activates prodigiosin biosynthesis in an OhrR-dependent manner. Specifically, the MarR-family transcriptional repressor OhrR (Ser39006_RS05455) binds to its operator located far upstream of the promoter region of the prodigiosin biosynthesis operon (319 to 286 nucleotides [nt] upstream of the transcription start site) and negatively regulates the expression of prodigiosin biosynthesis genes. Organic hydroperoxide disassociates the binding between OhrR and its operator, thereby promoting the prodigiosin production. Moreover, OhrR modulates the resistance of Serratia sp. ATCC 39006 to organic hydroperoxide by regulating the transcription of its own gene and the downstream cotranscribed ohr gene. These results demonstrate that OhrR is a pleiotropic repressor that modulates the prodigiosin production and the resistance of Serratia sp. ATCC 39006 to organic hydroperoxide stress. IMPORTANCE Bacteria naturally encounter various environmental and cellular stresses. Organic hydroperoxides generated from the oxidation of polyunsaturated fatty acids are widely distributed and usually cause lethal oxidative stress by damaging cellular components. OhrR is known as a regulator that modulates the resistance of bacteria to organic hydroperoxide stress. In the current study, organic hydroperoxide disassociates OhrR from the promoter of prodigiosin biosynthesis gene cluster, thus promoting transcription of pigA to -O genes. In this model, organic hydroperoxide acts as an inducer of prodigiosin synthesis in Serratia sp. ATCC 39006. These results improve our understanding of the regulatory network of prodigiosin synthesis and serve as an example for identifying the cross talk between the stress responses and the regulation of secondary metabolism.202235044847
997740.9773IncC conjugative plasmids and SXT/R391 elements repair double-strand breaks caused by CRISPR-Cas during conjugation. Bacteria have evolved defence mechanisms against bacteriophages. Restriction-modification systems provide innate immunity by degrading invading DNAs that lack proper methylation. CRISPR-Cas systems provide adaptive immunity by sampling the genome of past invaders and cutting the DNA of closely related DNA molecules. These barriers also restrict horizontal gene transfer mediated by conjugative plasmids. IncC conjugative plasmids are important contributors to the global dissemination of multidrug resistance among pathogenic bacteria infecting animals and humans. Here, we show that IncC conjugative plasmids are highly resilient to host defence systems during entry into a new host by conjugation. Using a TnSeq strategy, we uncover a conserved operon containing five genes (vcrx089-vcrx093) that confer a novel host defence evasion (hde) phenotype. We show that vcrx089-vcrx090 promote resistance against type I restriction-modification, whereas vcrx091-vcxr093 promote CRISPR-Cas evasion by repairing double-strand DNA breaks via recombination between short sequence repeats. vcrx091, vcrx092 and vcrx093 encode a single-strand binding protein, and a single-strand annealing recombinase and double-strand exonuclease related to Redβ and λExo of bacteriophage λ, respectively. Homologous genes of the integrative and conjugative element R391 also provide CRISPR-Cas evasion. Hence, the conserved hde operon considerably broadens the host range of large families of mobile elements spreading multidrug resistance.202032556263
17750.9772Bacterial mercury resistance from atoms to ecosystems. Bacterial resistance to inorganic and organic mercury compounds (HgR) is one of the most widely observed phenotypes in eubacteria. Loci conferring HgR in Gram-positive or Gram-negative bacteria typically have at minimum a mercuric reductase enzyme (MerA) that reduces reactive ionic Hg(II) to volatile, relatively inert, monoatomic Hg(0) vapor and a membrane-bound protein (MerT) for uptake of Hg(II) arranged in an operon under control of MerR, a novel metal-responsive regulator. Many HgR loci encode an additional enzyme, MerB, that degrades organomercurials by protonolysis, and one or more additional proteins apparently involved in transport. Genes conferring HgR occur on chromosomes, plasmids, and transposons and their operon arrangements can be quite diverse, frequently involving duplications of the above noted structural genes, several of which are modular themselves. How this very mobile and plastic suite of proteins protects host cells from this pervasive toxic metal, what roles it has in the biogeochemical cycling of Hg, and how it has been employed in ameliorating environmental contamination are the subjects of this review.200312829275
300360.9770IS26-Mediated Formation of Transposons Carrying Antibiotic Resistance Genes. The IS26 transposase, Tnp26, catalyzes IS26 movement to a new site and deletion or inversion of adjacent DNA via a replicative route. The intramolecular deletion reaction produces a circular molecule consisting of a DNA segment and a single IS26, which we call a translocatable unit or TU. Recently, Tnp26 was shown to catalyze an additional intermolecular, conservative reaction between two preexisting copies of IS26 in different plasmids. Here, we have investigated the relative contributions of homologous recombination and Tnp26-catalyzed reactions to the generation of a transposon from a TU. Circular TUs containing the aphA1a kanamycin and neomycin resistance gene or the tet(D) tetracycline resistance determinant were generated in vitro and transformed into Escherichia coli recA cells carrying R388::IS26. The TU incorporated next to the IS26 in R388::IS26 forms a transposon with the insertion sequence (IS) in direct orientation. Introduction of a second TU produced regions containing both the aphA1a gene and the tet(D) determinant in either order but with only three copies of IS26. The integration reaction, which required a preexisting IS26, was precise and conservative and was 50-fold more efficient when both IS26 copies could produce an active Tnp26. When both ISs were inactivated by a frameshift in tnp26, TU incorporation was not detected in E. coli recA cells, but it did occur in E. coli recA (+) cells. However, the Tnp-catalyzed reaction was 100-fold more efficient than RecA-dependent homologous recombination. The ability of Tnp26 to function in either a replicative or conservative mode is likely to explain the prominence of IS26-bounded transposons in the resistance regions found in Gram-negative bacteria. IMPORTANCE In Gram-negative bacteria, IS26 recruits antibiotic resistance genes into the mobile gene pool by forming transposons carrying many different resistance genes. In addition to replicative transposition, IS26 was recently shown to use a novel conservative movement mechanism in which an incoming IS26 targets a preexisting one. Here, we have demonstrated how IS26-bounded class I transposons can be produced from translocatable units (TUs) containing only an IS26 and a resistance gene via the conservative reaction. TUs were incorporated next to an existing IS26, creating a class I transposon, and if the targeted IS26 is in a transposon, the product resembles two transposons sharing a central IS26, a configuration observed in some resistance regions and when a transposon is tandemly duplicated. Though homologous recombination could also incorporate a TU, Tnp26 is far more efficient. This provides insight into how IS26 builds transposons and brings additional transposons into resistance regions.201627303727
66670.9770Adaptations to High Salt in a Halophilic Protist: Differential Expression and Gene Acquisitions through Duplications and Gene Transfers. The capacity of halophiles to thrive in extreme hypersaline habitats derives partly from the tight regulation of ion homeostasis, the salt-dependent adjustment of plasma membrane fluidity, and the increased capability to manage oxidative stress. Halophilic bacteria, and archaea have been intensively studied, and substantial research has been conducted on halophilic fungi, and the green alga Dunaliella. By contrast, there have been very few investigations of halophiles that are phagotrophic protists, i.e., protozoa. To gather fundamental knowledge about salt adaptation in these organisms, we studied the transcriptome-level response of Halocafeteria seosinensis (Stramenopiles) grown under contrasting salinities. We provided further evolutionary context to our analysis by identifying genes that underwent recent duplications. Genes that were highly responsive to salinity variations were involved in stress response (e.g., chaperones), ion homeostasis (e.g., Na(+)/H(+) transporter), metabolism and transport of lipids (e.g., sterol biosynthetic genes), carbohydrate metabolism (e.g., glycosidases), and signal transduction pathways (e.g., transcription factors). A significantly high proportion (43%) of duplicated genes were also differentially expressed, accentuating the importance of gene expansion in adaptation by H. seosinensis to high salt environments. Furthermore, we found two genes that were lateral acquisitions from bacteria, and were also highly up-regulated and highly expressed at high salt, suggesting that this evolutionary mechanism could also have facilitated adaptation to high salt. We propose that a transition toward high-salt adaptation in the ancestors of H. seosinensis required the acquisition of new genes via duplication, and some lateral gene transfers (LGTs), as well as the alteration of transcriptional programs, leading to increased stress resistance, proper establishment of ion gradients, and modification of cell structure properties like membrane fluidity.201728611746
37480.9769Simultaneous detection and removal of organomercurial compounds by using the genetic expression system of an organomercury lyase from the transposon Tn MERI1. Using a newly identified organomercury lyase gene (merB3) expression system from Tn MERI1, the mercury resistance transposon first found in Gram-positive bacteria, a dual-purpose system to detect and remove organomercurial contamination was developed. A plasmid was constructed by fusing the promoterless luxAB genes as bioluminescence reporter genes downstream of the merB3 gene and its operator/promoter region. Another plasmid, encoding mer operon genes from merR1 to merA, was also constructed to generate an expression regulatory protein, MerR1, and a mercury reductase enzyme, MerA. These two plasmids were transformed into Escherichia coli cells to produce a biological system that can detect and remove environmental organomercury contamination. Organomercurial compounds, such as neurotoxic methylmercury at nanomolar levels, were detected using the biomonitoring system within a few minutes and were removed during the next few hours.200212073137
17990.9769The genetics and biochemistry of mercury resistance. The ability of bacteria to detoxify mercurial compounds by reduction and volatilization is conferred by mer genes, which are usually plasmid located. The narrow spectrum (Hg2+ detoxifying) Tn501 and R100 determinants have been subjected to molecular genetic and DNA sequence analysis. Biochemical studies on the flavoprotein mercuric reductase have elucidated the mechanism of reduction of Hg2+ to Hg0. The mer genes have been mapped and sequenced and their protein products studied in minicells. Based on the deduced amino acid sequences, these proteins have been assigned a role in a mechanistic scheme for mercury flux in resistant bacteria. The mer genes are inducible, with regulatory control being exerted at the transcriptional level both positively and negatively. Attention is now focusing on broad-spectrum resistance involving detoxification of organomercurials by an additional enzyme, organomercurial lyase. Lyase genes have recently been cloned and sequencing studies are in progress.19872827958
176100.9769The mercury resistance (mer) operon in a marine gliding flavobacterium, Tenacibaculum discolor 9A5. Genes conferring mercury resistance have been investigated in a variety of bacteria and archaea but not in bacteria of the phylum Bacteroidetes, despite their importance in many environments. We found, however, that a marine gliding Bacteroidetes species, Tenacibaculum discolor, was the predominant mercury-resistant bacterial taxon cultured from a salt marsh fertilized with mercury-contaminated sewage sludge. Here we report characterization of the mercuric reductase and the narrow-spectrum mercury resistance (mer) operon from one of these strains - T. discolor 9A5. This mer operon, which confers mercury resistance when cloned into Flavobacterium johnsoniae, encodes a novel mercury-responsive ArsR/SmtB family transcriptional regulator that appears to have evolved independently from other mercury-responsive regulators, a novel putative transport protein consisting of a fusion between the integral membrane Hg(II) transporter MerT and the periplasmic Hg(II)-binding protein MerP, an additional MerP protein, and a mercuric reductase that is phylogenetically distinct from other known mercuric reductases.201322816663
132110.9768Chromium resistance strategies and toxicity: what makes Ochrobactrum tritici 5bvl1 a strain highly resistant. Large-scale industrial use of chromium (Cr) resulted in widespread environmental contamination with hexavalent chromium (Cr(VI)). The ability of microorganisms to survive in these environments and detoxify chromate requires the presence of specific resistance systems. Several Cr(VI) resistant species, belonging to a variety of genera, have been isolated in recent years. Ochrobactrum tritici strain 5bvl1 is a model for a highly Cr(VI)-resistant and reducing microorganism, with different strategies to cope with chromium. The strain contains the transposon-located (TnOtChr) chromate resistance genes chrB, chrA, chrC, chrF. The chrB and chrA genes were found to be essential for the establishment of high resistance but not chrC or chrF genes. Other mechanisms involved in chromium resistance in this strain were related to strategies such as specific or unspecific Cr(VI) reduction, free-radical detoxifying activities, and repairing DNA damage. Expression of the chrB, chrC or chrF genes was related to increased resistance to superoxide-generating agents. Genetic analyses also showed that, the ruvB gene is related to chromium resistance in O. tritici 5bvl1. The RuvABC complex probably does not form when ruvB gene is interrupted, and the repair of DNA damage induced by chromium is prevented. Aerobic or anaerobic chromate reductase activity and other unspecific mechanisms for chromium reduction have been identified in different bacteria. In the strain O. tritici 5bvl1, several unspecific mechanisms were found. Dichromate and chromate have different effects on the physiology of the chromium resistant strains and dichromate seems to be more toxic. Toxicity of Cr(VI) was evaluated by following growth, reduction, respiration, glucose uptake assays and by comparing cell morphology.201121472416
545120.9767Characterization of the organic hydroperoxide resistance system of Brucella abortus 2308. The organic hydroperoxide resistance protein Ohr has been identified in numerous bacteria where it functions in the detoxification of organic hydroperoxides, and expression of ohr is often regulated by a MarR-type regulator called OhrR. The genes annotated as BAB2_0350 and BAB2_0351 in the Brucella abortus 2308 genome sequence are predicted to encode OhrR and Ohr orthologs, respectively. Using isogenic ohr and ohrR mutants and lacZ promoter fusions, it was determined that Ohr contributes to resistance to organic hydroperoxide, but not hydrogen peroxide, in B. abortus 2308 and that OhrR represses the transcription of both ohr and ohrR in this strain. Moreover, electrophoretic mobility shift assays and DNase I footprinting revealed that OhrR binds directly to a specific region in the intergenic region between ohr and ohrR that shares extensive nucleotide sequence similarity with so-called "OhrR boxes" described in other bacteria. While Ohr plays a prominent role in protecting B. abortus 2308 from organic hydroperoxide stress in in vitro assays, this protein is not required for the wild-type virulence of this strain in cultured murine macrophages or experimentally infected mice.201222821968
9979130.9766Type II and IV toxin-antitoxin systems coordinately stabilize the integrative and conjugative element of the ICESa2603 family conferring multiple drug resistance in Streptococcus suis. Integrative and conjugative elements (ICEs) play a vital role in bacterial evolution by carrying essential genes that confer adaptive functions to the host. Despite their importance, the mechanism underlying the stable inheritance of ICEs, which is necessary for the acquisition of new traits in bacteria, remains poorly understood. Here, we identified SezAT, a type II toxin-antitoxin (TA) system, and AbiE, a type IV TA system encoded within the ICESsuHN105, coordinately promote ICE stabilization and mediate multidrug resistance in Streptococcus suis. Deletion of SezAT or AbiE did not affect the strain's antibiotic susceptibility, but their duple deletion increased susceptibility, mainly mediated by the antitoxins SezA and AbiEi. Further studies have revealed that SezA and AbiEi affect the genetic stability of ICESsuHN105 by moderating the excision and extrachromosomal copy number, consequently affecting the antibiotic resistance conferred by ICE. The DNA-binding proteins AbiEi and SezA, which bind palindromic sequences in the promoter, coordinately modulate ICE excision and extracellular copy number by binding to sequences in the origin-of-transfer (oriT) and the attL sites, respectively. Furthermore, AbiEi negatively regulates the transcription of SezAT by binding directly to its promoter, optimizing the coordinate network of SezAT and AbiE in maintaining ICESsuHN105 stability. Importantly, SezAT and AbiE are widespread and conserved in ICEs harbouring diverse drug-resistance genes, and their coordinated effects in promoting ICE stability and mediating drug resistance may be broadly applicable to other ICEs. Altogether, our study uncovers the TA system's role in maintaining the genetic stability of ICE and offers potential targets for overcoming the dissemination and evolution of drug resistance.202438640137
126140.9765Single-gene knockout of a novel regulatory element confers ethionine resistance and elevates methionine production in Corynebacterium glutamicum. Despite the availability of genome data and recent advances in methionine regulation in Corynebacterium glutamicum, sulfur metabolism and its underlying molecular mechanisms are still poorly characterized in this organism. Here, we describe the identification of an ORF coding for a putative regulatory protein that controls the expression of genes involved in sulfur reduction dependent on extracellular methionine levels. C. glutamicum was randomly mutagenized by transposon mutagenesis and 7,000 mutants were screened for rapid growth on agar plates containing the methionine antimetabolite D,L-ethionine. In all obtained mutants, the site of insertion was located in the ORF NCgl2640 of unknown function that has several homologues in other bacteria. All mutants exhibited similar ethionine resistance and this phenotype could be transferred to another strain by the defined deletion of the NCgl2640 gene. Moreover, inactivation of NCgl2640 resulted in significantly increased methionine production. Using promoter lacZ-fusions of genes involved in sulfur metabolism, we demonstrated the relief of L-methionine repression in the NCgl2640 mutant for cysteine synthase, o-acetylhomoserine sulfhydrolase (metY) and sulfite reductase. Complementation of the mutant strain with plasmid-borne NCgl2640 restored the wild-type phenotype for metY and sulfite reductase.200515668756
349150.9765Mini-Tn5 transposon derivatives for insertion mutagenesis, promoter probing, and chromosomal insertion of cloned DNA in gram-negative eubacteria. A collection of Tn5-derived minitransposons has been constructed that simplifies substantially the generation of insertion mutants, in vivo fusions with reporter genes, and the introduction of foreign DNA fragments into the chromosome of a variety of gram-negative bacteria, including the enteric bacteria and typical soil bacteria like Pseudomonas species. The minitransposons consist of genes specifying resistance to kanamycin, chloramphenicol, streptomycin-spectinomycin, and tetracycline as selection markers and a unique NotI cloning site flanked by 19-base-pair terminal repeat sequences of Tn5. Further derivatives also contain lacZ, phoA, luxAB, or xylE genes devoid of their native promoters located next to the terminal repeats in an orientation that affords the generation of gene-operon fusions. The transposons are located on a R6K-based suicide delivery plasmid that provides the IS50R transposase tnp gene in cis but external to the mobile element and whose conjugal transfer to recipients is mediated by RP4 mobilization functions in the donor.19902172217
184160.9765Plasmid chromate resistance and chromate reduction. Compounds of hexavalent chromium (chromates and dichromates) are highly toxic. Plasmid genetic determinants for chromate resistance have been described in several bacterial genera, most notably in Pseudomonas. Resistance to chromate is associated with decreased chromate transport by the resistant cells. The genes for a hydrophobic polypeptide, ChrA, were identified in chromate resistance plasmids of Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Alcaligenes eutrophus. ChrA is postulated to be responsible for the outward membrane translocation of chromate anions. Widespread bacterial reduction of hexavalent chromate to the less toxic trivalent chromic ions is also known. Chromate reduction determinants have not, however, been found on bacterial plasmids or transposons. In different bacteria, chromate reduction is either an aerobic or an anaerobic process (but not both) and is carried out either by soluble proteins or by cell membranes. Chromate reduction may also be a mechanism of resistance to chromate, but this has not been unequivocally shown.19921741461
344170.9765Identification of genes in Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. trifolii whose products are homologues to a family of ATP-binding proteins. The specific interaction between rhizobia and their hosts requires many genes that influence both early and late steps in symbiosis. Three new genes, designated prsD, prsE (protein secretion) and orf3, were identified adjacent to the exo133 mutation in a cosmid carrying the genomic DNA of Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. trifolii TA1. The prsDE genes share significant homology to the genes encoding ABC transporter proteins PrtDE from Erwinia chrysanthemi and AprDE from Pseudomonas aeruginosa which export the proteases in these bacteria. PrsD shows at least five potential transmembrane hydrophobic regions and a large hydrophilic domain containing an ATP/GTP binding cassette. PrsE has only one potential transmembrane hydrophobic domain in the N-terminal part and is proposed to function as an accessory factor in the transport system. ORF3, like PrtF and AprF, has a typical N-terminal signal sequence but has no homology to these proteins. The insertion of a kanamycin resistance cassette into the prsD gene of the R. leguminosarum bv. trifolii TA1 wild-type strain created a mutant which produced a normal amount of exopolysaccharide but was not effective in the nodulation of clover plants.19979141701
3002180.9764An IS26 variant with enhanced activity. The insertion sequence IS26 plays a major role in the mobilization, expression and dissemination of antibiotic resistance genes in Gram-negative bacteria. Though IS26 is abundant in sequenced genomes and in plasmids that harbour antibiotic resistance genes, only a few minor variations in the IS26 sequence have been recorded. The most common variant, IS26* (also known as IS15Δ1), encodes a Tnp26 transposase with a single amino acid substitution, G184N in the catalytic domain. Using computational modelling, this substitution was predicted to increase the length of the helix that includes the E173 residue of the catalytic DDE triad, and its effect on activity was tested. An IS26 mutant generated in vitro producing Tnp26-G184N formed cointegrates in a standard untargeted reaction at 5-fold higher frequency than IS26 producing Tnp26. When the target included a single copy of IS26, the G184N substitution increased the cointegration frequency 10-fold and the reaction was targeted and conservative. Hence, the substitution increased Tnp26 activity. The longer helix may stabilise the position of the E173 of the DDE for the catalysis reaction and the specific G184N substitution may also enhance activity by increasing binding to the terminal inverted repeats.201930753435
180190.9764Bacterial resistances to inorganic mercury salts and organomercurials. Environmental and clinical isolates of mercury-resistant (resistant to inorganic mercury salts and organomercurials) bacteria have genes for the enzymes mercuric ion reductase and organomercurial lyase. These genes are often plasmid-encoded, although chromosomally encoded resistance determinants have been occasionally identified. Organomercurial lyase cleaves the C-Hg bond and releases Hg(II) in addition to the appropriate organic compound. Mercuric reductase reduces Hg(II) to Hg(O), which is nontoxic and volatilizes from the medium. Mercuric reductase is a FAD-containing oxidoreductase and requires NAD(P)H and thiol for in vitro activity. The crystal structure of mercuric ion reductase has been partially solved. The primary sequence and the three-dimensional structure of the mercuric reductase are significantly homologous to those of other flavin-containing oxidoreductases, e.g., glutathione reductase and lipoamide dehydrogenase. The active site sequences are the most conserved region among these flavin-containing enzymes. Genes encoding other functions have been identified on all mercury ion resistance determinants studied thus far. All mercury resistance genes are clustered into an operon. Hg(II) is transported into the cell by the products of one to three genes encoded on the resistance determinants. The expression of the operon is regulated and is inducible by Hg(II). In some systems, the operon is inducible by both Hg(II) and some organomercurials. In gram-negative bacteria, two regulatory genes (merR and merD) were identified. The (merR) regulatory gene is transcribed divergently from the other genes in gram-negative bacteria. The product of merR represses operon expression in the absence of the inducers and activates transcription in the presence of the inducers. The product of merD coregulates (modulates) the expression of the operon. Both merR and merD gene products bind to the same operator DNA. The primary sequence of the promoter for the polycistronic mer operon is not ideal for efficient transcription by the RNA polymerase. The -10 and -35 sequences are separated by 19 (gram-negative systems) or 20 (gram-positive systems) nucleotides, 2 or 3 nucleotides longer than the 17-nucleotide optimum distance for binding and efficient transcription by the Escherichia coli sigma 70-containing RNA polymerase. The binding site of MerR is not altered by the presence of Hg(II) (inducer). Experimental data suggest that the MerR-Hg(II) complex alters the local structure of the promoter region, facilitating initiation of transcription of the mer operon by the RNA polymerase. In gram-positive bacteria MerR also positively regulates expression of the mer operon in the presence of Hg(II).19921311113