An Ionic Liquid Facilitates the Proliferation of Antibiotic Resistance Genes Mediated by Class I Integrons

2014 ◽  
Vol 1 (5) ◽  
pp. 266-270 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yi Luo ◽  
Qing Wang ◽  
Qian Lu ◽  
Quanhua Mu ◽  
Daqing Mao
2018 ◽  
Vol 4 (11) ◽  
pp. 1807-1818 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lee K. Kimbell ◽  
Anthony D. Kappell ◽  
Patrick J. McNamara

Biosolids carry a substantial portion of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) leaving wastewater treatment plants. Pyrolysis substantially reduces ARGs in biosolids.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thi Thu Hang Pham ◽  
Khoa Dinh Hoang Dang ◽  
Emmanuelle Rohrbach ◽  
Florian Breider ◽  
Pierre Rossi

Aquaculture activities are steadily expanding in Vietnam, covering an estimated 700,000 ha, with 89% of these culture ponds located in the Mekong Delta. Since 2009, large-scale bacterial epidemics have spread in response to this intensive cultivation. Antibiotics, even those considered as a last resort, have only partially mitigated this problem. In turn, the side effects of the massive use of these chemicals include the appearance of mobile genetic elements associated with antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs). The large-scale emergence of a diverse bacterial resistome, along with severe economic losses, has posed significant health risks to local residents. In this study, the seasonal and spatial distributions of the class I integrase (CL1) intl1 and the ARGs sul2 (sulfonamide), BLA-oxa1 (β-lactams), and ermB (erythromycin) were quantified from water and sediment samples collected during two consecutive seasons along the Vam Co River and its tributary (Long An province, Vietnam). The results showed that CL1 was present in all river compartments, reaching 2.98×104 copies/mL and 1.07×106 copies/g of sediment, respectively. The highest relative copy abundances to the 16S rDNA gene were measured in water samples, with up to 3.02% for BLA-oxa1, followed by sul2 (1.16%) and ermB (0.46%). Strong seasonal (dry season vs. rainy season) and spatial patterns were recorded for all resistance genes. Higher amounts of ARGs in river water could be associated with higher antibiotic use during the rainy season. In contrast, higher amounts of ARGs were recorded in river sediments during the dry season, making this habitat a potential reservoir of transient genes. Finally, the observations made in this study allowed us to clarify the environmental and anthropogenic influences that may favor the dispersal and persistence of ARGS in this riverine ecosystem.


mSphere ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher J. Harmer ◽  
Ruth M. Hall

ABSTRACT 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. 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.


mBio ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 5 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher J. Harmer ◽  
Robert A. Moran ◽  
Ruth M. Hall

ABSTRACTThe insertion sequence IS26plays a key role in disseminating antibiotic resistance genes in Gram-negative bacteria, forming regions containing more than one antibiotic resistance gene that are flanked by and interspersed with copies of IS26. A model presented for a second mode of IS26movement that explains the structure of these regions involves a translocatable unit consisting of a unique DNA segment carrying an antibiotic resistance (or other) gene and a single IS copy. Structures resembling class I transposons are generated via RecA-independent incorporation of a translocatable unit next to a second IS26such that the ISs are in direct orientation. Repeating this process would lead to arrays of resistance genes with directly oriented copies of IS26at each end and between each unique segment. This model requires that IS26recognizes another IS26as a target, and in transposition experiments, the frequency of cointegrate formation was 60-fold higher when the target plasmid contained IS26. This reaction was conservative, with no additional IS26or target site duplication generated, and orientation specific as the IS26s in the cointegrates were always in the same orientation. Consequently, the cointegrates were identical to those formed via the known mode of IS26movement when a target IS26was not present. Intact transposase genes in both IS26s were required for high-frequency cointegrate formation as inactivation of either one reduced the frequency 30-fold. However, the IS26target specificity was retained. Conversion of each residue in the DDE motif of the Tnp26 transposase also reduced the cointegration frequency.IMPORTANCEResistance to antibiotics belonging to several of the different classes used to treat infections is a critical problem. Multiply antibiotic-resistant bacteria usually carry large regions containing several antibiotic resistance genes, and in Gram-negative bacteria, IS26is often seen in these clusters. A model to explain the unusual structure of regions containing multiple IS26copies, each associated with a resistance gene, was not available, and the mechanism of their formation was unexplored. IS26-flanked structures deceptively resemble class I transposons, but this work reveals that the features of IS26movement do not resemble those of the IS and class I transposons studied to date. IS26uses a novel movement mechanism that defines a new family of mobile genetic elements that we have called “translocatable units.” The IS26mechanism also explains the properties of IS257(IS431) and IS1216, which belong to the same IS family and mobilize resistance genes in Gram-positive staphylococci and enterococci.


Gene Reports ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 16 ◽  
pp. 100441
Author(s):  
Mehran Ghazalibina ◽  
Reza Khaltabadi Farahani ◽  
Shamseddin Mansouri ◽  
Maryam Meskini ◽  
Amir Hossien Khaltabadi Farahani ◽  
...  

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