natural transformation
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

483
(FIVE YEARS 123)

H-INDEX

55
(FIVE YEARS 6)

Author(s):  
Hongyan Luo ◽  
Dekang Zhu ◽  
Mengru Li ◽  
Yunhan Tang ◽  
Wenyu Zhang ◽  
...  

Whole genome sequencing of Riemerella anatipestifer isolate RCAD0122 revealed a chromosomally-located β-lactamases gene, bla RAA-1 , which encoded a novel class A extended-spectrum β-lactamases (ESBL), RAA-1. The RAA-1 shared ≤ 65% amino acid sequence identity with other characterized β-lactamases. The kinetic assay of native purified RAA-1 revealed ESBL-like hydrolysis activity. Furthermore, bla RAA-1 could be transferred to a homologous strain by natural transformation. However, the epidemiological study showed that the bla RAA-1 gene is not prevalent currently.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
HA Kittredge ◽  
SE Evans

AbstractThe exchange of genes between potentially unrelated bacteria is termed horizontal gene transfer (HGT) and is a driving force in bacterial evolution. Natural transformation is one mechanism of HGT where extracellular DNA (eDNA) from the environment is recombined into a host genome. The widespread conservation of transformation in bacterial lineages implies there is a fitness benefit. However, the nature of these benefits and the evolutionary origins of transformation are still unknown. Here, I examine how ∼330 generations or 100 days of serial passage in either constant or increasing salinities impacts the growth rate and transformation efficiency of Pseudomonas stutzeri. While the growth rate generally improved in response to serial transfer, the transformation efficiency of the evolved lineages varied extensively, with only 39-64% of populations undergoing transformation at the end of adaptive evolution. In comparison, 100% of the ancestral populations were able to undergo natural transformation. I also found that evolving P. stutzeri with different cell lysates (or populations of dead cells) minimally affected the growth rate and transformation efficiency, especially in comparison to the pervasiveness with which transformation capacity was lost across the evolved populations. Taken together, I show that the efficiency of eDNA uptake changes over relatively rapid timescales, suggesting that transformation is an adaptive and selectable trait that could be lost in environments where it is not beneficial.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Heather A. Kittredge ◽  
Kevin M. Dougherty ◽  
Sarah E. Evans

AbstractAntibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) are ubiquitous in the environment and pose a serious risk to human and veterinary health. While many studies focus on the spread of live antibiotic resistant bacteria throughout the environment, it is unclear whether extracellular ARGs from dead cells can transfer to live bacteria to facilitate the evolution of antibiotic resistance in nature. Here, we inoculate antibiotic-free soil with extracellular ARGs (eARGs) from dead Pseudeononas stutzeri cells and track the evolution of antibiotic resistance via natural transformation – a mechanism of horizontal gene transfer involving the genomic integration of eARGs. We find that transformation facilitates the rapid evolution of antibiotic resistance even when eARGs occur at low concentrations (0.25 μg g-1 soil). However, when eARGs are abundant, transformation increases substantially. The evolution of antibiotic resistance was high under soil moistures typical in terrestrial systems (5%-30% gravimetric water content) and was only inhibited at very high soil moistures (>30%). While eARGs transformed into live cells at a low frequency, exposure to a low dose of antibiotic allowed a small number of transformants to reach high abundances in laboratory populations, suggesting even rare transformation events pose a risk to human health. Overall, this work demonstrates that dead bacteria and their eARGs are an overlooked path to antibiotic resistance, and that disinfection alone is insufficient to stop the spread of antibiotic resistance. More generally, the spread of eARGs in antibiotic-free soil suggests that transformation allows genetic variants to establish at low frequencies in the absence of antibiotic selection.ImportanceOver the last decade, antibiotics in the environment have gained increasing attention because they can select for drug-resistant phenotypes that would have otherwise gone extinct. To counter this effect, bacterial populations exposed to antibiotics often undergo disinfection. However, the release of extracellular antibiotic resistance genes (eARGs) into the environment following disinfection can promote the transfer of eARGs through natural transformation. This phenomenon is well-documented in wastewater and drinking water, but yet to be investigated in soil. Our results directly demonstrate that eARGs from dead bacteria are an important, but often overlooked source of antibiotic resistance in soil. We conclude that disinfection alone is insufficient to prevent the spread of ARGs. Special caution should be taken in releasing antibiotics into the environment, even if there are no live antibiotic resistant bacteria in the community, as transformation allows DNA to maintain its biological activity past microbial death.


2021 ◽  
Vol 64 ◽  
pp. 133-138
Author(s):  
Macaulay Winter ◽  
Angus Buckling ◽  
Klaus Harms ◽  
Pål Jarle Johnsen ◽  
Michiel Vos

Author(s):  
Taiki Shibata ◽  
Kenichi Shimizu

AbstractWe organize the modified trace theory with the use of the Nakayama functor of finite abelian categories. For a linear right exact functor Σ on a finite abelian category ${\mathscr{M}}$ M , we introduce the notion of a Σ-twisted trace on the class $\text {Proj}({\mathscr{M}})$ Proj ( M ) of projective objects of ${\mathscr{M}}$ M . In our framework, there is a one-to-one correspondence between the set of Σ-twisted traces on $\text {Proj}({\mathscr{M}})$ Proj ( M ) and the set of natural transformations from Σ to the Nakayama functor of ${\mathscr{M}}$ M . Non-degeneracy and compatibility with the module structure (when ${\mathscr{M}}$ M is a module category over a finite tensor category) of a Σ-twisted trace can be written down in terms of the corresponding natural transformation. As an application of this principal, we give existence and uniqueness criteria for modified traces. In particular, a unimodular pivotal finite tensor category admits a non-zero two-sided modified trace if and only if it is spherical. Also, a ribbon finite tensor category admits such a trace if and only if it is unimodular.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hannah Reed Foster ◽  
Xiaoxuan Lin ◽  
Sriram Srikant ◽  
Rachel R Cueny ◽  
Tanya G Falbel ◽  
...  

Natural transformation is one of the major mechanisms of horizontal gene transfer in bacterial populations and has been demonstrated in numerous species of bacteria. Despite the prevalence of natural transformation, much of the molecular mechanism remains unexplored. One major outstanding question is how the cell powers DNA import, which is rapid and highly processive. ComFA is one of a handful of proteins required for natural transformation in gram-positive bacteria. Its structural resemblance to the DEAD-box helicase family has led to a long-held hypothesis that ComFA acts as a motor to help drive DNA import into the cytosol. Here, we explored the helicase and translocase activity of ComFA to address this hypothesis. We followed the DNA-dependent ATPase activity of ComFA and, combined with mathematical modeling, demonstrated that ComFA likely translocates on single-stranded DNA from 5′ to 3′. However, this translocase activity does not lead to DNA unwinding in the conditions we tested. Further, we analyzed the ATPase cycle of ComFA and found that ATP hydrolysis stimulates the release of DNA, providing a potential mechanism for translocation. These findings help define the molecular contribution of ComFA to natural transformation and support the conclusion that ComFA plays a key role in powering DNA uptake.


Author(s):  
Kristen E. Wendt ◽  
Patricia Walker ◽  
Annesha Sengupta ◽  
Justin Ungerer ◽  
Himadri B. Pakrasi

Natural transformation is the process by which bacteria actively take up and integrate extracellular DNA into their genomes. In cyanobacteria, natural transformation has only been experimentally demonstrated in a handful of species. Although, cyanobacteria are important model systems for studying photosynthesis and circadian cycling, natural transformation in cyanobacteria has not been characterized to the degree that the process has been studied in other gram-negative bacteria. Two cyanobacterial species that are 99.8% genetically identical provide a unique opportunity to better understand the nuances of natural transformation in cyanobacteria: Synechococcus elongatus PCC 7942 and Synechococcus elongatus UTEX 2973 (hereafter Synechococcus 7942 and Synechococcus 2973 respectively). Synechococcus 7942 is a naturally transformable model system, while Synechococcus 2973 is a recently discovered species that is not naturally competent. Taking only 1.5 hours to replicate, Synechococcus 2973 is the fastest growing cyanobacterial species known, and thus is a strong candidate for serving as a model organism. However, the organism’s inability to undergo natural transformation has prevented it from becoming a widely used model system. By substituting polymorphic alleles from Synechococcus 7942 for native Synechococcus 2973 alleles, natural transformation was introduced into Synechococcus 2973. Two genetic loci were found to be involved in differential natural competence between the two organisms: transformation pilus component pilN and circadian transcriptional master regulator rpaA . By using targeting genome editing and enrichment outgrowth, a strain that was both naturally transformable and fast-growing was created. This new Synechococcus 2973-T strain will serve as a valuable resource to the cyanobacterial research community. Importance Certain bacterial species have the ability to take up naked extracellular DNA and integrate it into their genomes. This process is known as natural transformation and is widely considered to play a major role in bacterial evolution. Because of the ease of introducing new genes into naturally transformable organisms, this capacity is also highly valued in the laboratory. Cyanobacteria are photosynthetic and can therefore serve as model systems for some important aspects of plant physiology. Here, we describe the creation of a modified cyanobacterial strain ( Synechococcus 2973-T) that is capable of undergoing natural transformation and has a replication time that is on par with the fastest-growing cyanobacterium that has been discovered to date. This new cyanobacterium has the potential to serve as a new model organism for the cyanobacterial research community and will allow experiments to be completed in a fraction of the time that it took to complete previous assays.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (10) ◽  
pp. e0258583
Author(s):  
Lulu Cai ◽  
Mukesh Jain ◽  
Marta Sena-Vélez ◽  
Kathryn M. Jones ◽  
Laura A. Fleites ◽  
...  

Axenically cultured Liberibacter crescens (Lcr) is a closely related surrogate for uncultured plant pathogenic species of the genus Liberibacter, including ‘Candidatus L. asiaticus’ (CLas) and ‘Ca. L. solanacearum’ (CLso). All Liberibacters encode a completely conserved gene repertoire for both flagella and Tad (Tight Adherence) pili and all are missing genes critical for nucleotide biosynthesis. Both flagellar swimming and Tad pilus-mediated twitching motility in Lcr were demonstrated for the first time. A role for Tad pili in the uptake of extracellular dsDNA for food in Liberibacters was suspected because both twitching and DNA uptake are impossible without repetitive pilus extension and retraction, and no genes encoding other pilus assemblages or mechanisms for DNA uptake were predicted to be even partially present in any of the 35 fully sequenced Liberibacter genomes. Insertional mutations of the Lcr Tad pilus genes cpaA, cpaB, cpaE, cpaF and tadC all displayed such severely reduced growth and viability that none could be complemented. A mutation affecting cpaF (motor ATPase) was further characterized and the strain displayed concomitant loss of twitching, viability and reduced periplasmic uptake of extracellular dsDNA. Mutations of comEC, encoding the inner membrane competence channel, had no effect on either motility or growth but completely abolished natural transformation in Lcr. The comEC mutation was restored by complementation using comEC from Lcr but not from CLas strain psy62 or CLso strain RS100, indicating that unlike Lcr, these pathogens were not naturally competent for transformation. This report provides the first evidence that the Liberibacter Tad pili are dynamic and essential for both motility and DNA uptake, thus extending their role beyond surface adherence.


2021 ◽  
pp. 101346
Author(s):  
Laura Ledesma-García ◽  
Imke Ensinck ◽  
Denis Dereinne ◽  
Felipe Viela ◽  
Johann Mignolet ◽  
...  

PeerJ ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
pp. e12098
Author(s):  
You Yin ◽  
Qiuli Li ◽  
Haitao Du

Pinus tabulaeformis plantations have been established around northern China to restore degraded land and provide timber or fuelwood. In recent years, widely distributed monoculture P. tabulaeformis forests have been transformed into mixed forests due to various ecological problems. However, the current research on the influence of near-natural transformation of P. tabulaeformis on soil microbial diversity and community composition remains limited. Therefore, we examined the effect of forest conversion from monoculture Pinus tabuliformis (PT) to P. tabuliformis-Armeniaca vulgaris (PTAU), P. tabuliformis - Robinia pseudoacacia (PTRP), P. tabuliformis - Vitex negundo L. var. heterophylla (PTVN) forests on soil microbial community diversity and composition. The results indicated that compared to PT, PTAU, PTVN, and PTRP could enhance the soil pH, TC, TN, AN, and AK in different degrees, the most obvious in PTAU. Near-natural transformation of P. tabuliformis could improve soil bacterial Pielou_e index, and Simpson index, as well as soil fungal Chao1 index. Proteobacteria and Ascomycota were the dominant soil microbial community at the phylum level. What’s more, both soil bacterial and fungal community among PT, PTAU, PTRP and PTVN showed clear different, and PTAU obviously altered the soil microbial community structure. Proteobacteria was the predominant group in PT, while, Gemmatimonadetes enriched in PTVN. Ascomycota was the predominant group in PTAU, while, Basidiomycota was the predominant group in PTRP. Near-natural transformation of P. tabuliformis could change soil microbial community via altering soil characteristics. In brief, our research results revealed the influence of tree composition and soil nutrient availability on soil microbial diversity and composition, and provided management guidance for introduction soil microbial community in forest protection and management.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document