conjugative plasmid transfer
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Author(s):  
Yu-Chieh Lin ◽  
Eric H.-L. Chen ◽  
Rita P.-Y. Chen ◽  
Gary M. Dunny ◽  
Wei-Shou Hu ◽  
...  

Enterococcus faecalis, a member of the commensal flora in the human gastrointestinal tract, has become a threatening nosocomial pathogen because it has developed resistance to many known antibiotics. More concerningly, resistance gene-carrying E. faecalis cells may transfer antibiotic resistance to resistance-free E. faecalis cells through their unique quorum sensing-mediated plasmid transfer system. Therefore, we investigated the role of probiotic bacteria in the transfer frequency of the antibiotic resistance plasmid pCF10 in E. faecalis populations to mitigate the spread of antibiotic resistance. Bacillus subtilis natto is a probiotic strain isolated from Japanese fermented soybean foods, and its culture fluid potently inhibited pCF10 transfer by suppressing peptide pheromone activity from cCF10 without inhibiting E. faecalis growth. The inhibitory effect was attributed to at least one 30-50 kDa extracellular protease present in B. subtilis natto. Nattokinase of B. subtilis natto was involved in the inhibition of pCF10 transfer and cleaved cCF10 (LVTLVFV) into “LVTL + VFV” fragments. Moreover, the cleavage product “LVTL” (L peptide) interfered with the conjugative transfer of pCF10. In addition to cCF10, faecalis-cAM373 and gordonii-cAM373, which are mating inducers of vancomycin-resistant E. faecalis, were also cleaved by nattokinase, indicating that B. subtilis natto can likely interfere with vancomycin resistance transfer in E. faecalis. Our work shows the feasibility of applying fermentation products of B. subtilis natto and L peptide to mitigate E. faecalis antibiotic resistance transfer. Importance Enterococcus faecalis is considered a leading cause of hospital-acquired infections. Treatment of these infections has become a major challenge for clinicians because some E. faecalis strains are resistant to multiple clinically used antibiotics. Moreover, antibiotic resistance genes can undergo efficient intra- and interspecies transfer via E. faecalis peptide pheromone-mediated plasmid transfer systems. Therefore, this study provided the first experimental demonstration that probiotics are a feasible approach for interfering with conjugative plasmid transfer between E. faecalis strains to stop the transfer of antibiotic resistance. We found that the extracellular protease(s) of Bacillus subtilis natto cleaved peptide pheromones without affecting the growth of E. faecalis, thereby reducing the frequency of conjugative plasmid transfer. In addition, a specific cleaved pheromone fragment interfered with conjugative plasmid transfer. These findings provide a potential probiotic-based method for interfering with the transfer of antibiotic resistance between E. faecalis strains.


2021 ◽  
Vol 268 ◽  
pp. 115903
Author(s):  
Qiang Pu ◽  
Xiao-Ting Fan ◽  
Hu Li ◽  
Xin-Li An ◽  
Simon Bo Lassen ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 16 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
O. Vasieva ◽  
I. Goryanin

AbstractFunctional coupling and comparative genomics analysis have been applied to study functional associations of orthologs of enterococcal cAD1 sex pheromone (P13268) known to be responsible for biofilm formation, conjugative plasmid transfer and spreading of bacterial antibiotics resistance. cAD1 peptide pheromone is released from the membrane lipoprotein with the peptide precursor encoded by a gene cad (tr|C2JQE7). Our analysis of genomic neighbourhood of cad and motifs of the encoded polypeptide and its orthologs suggests a close functional association between cAD1 and ApbE protein (Q82Z24), a FMN insertion and trafficking facilitator. The cad and apbE orthologs were coupled in the genomes and ApbE-specific motifs for FMN covalent attachment were identified in cad-encoded protein sequence and its orthologs. These findings suggest a potential role of FMN-based reductase function of the cAD1 lipoprotein precursor in its processing and release of the active sex pheromone peptide. They may lead to a new approach in prevention of antibiotic resistance spread via targeting sex pheromone processing chaperones or by suppression of the FMN availability and covalent binding. This methods can be also applied to a controlled evolution of bacterial pathogenicity in microbial fuel cells, as the findings suggest the crosstalk between bacterial pathogenicity and bacterial electro-activity.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Irina Afonina ◽  
Xin Ni Lim ◽  
Rosalind Tan ◽  
Kimberly A. Kline

ABSTRACTLike many bacteria,Enterococcus faecalisencodes a number of adhesins involved in colonization or infection of different niches. Two well-studiedE. faecalisadhesins, aggregation substance (AS) and endocarditis and biofilm-associated pili (Ebp), both contribute to biofilm formation on abiotic surfaces and in endocarditis, suggesting they may be expressed at the same time. Because different regulatory pathways have been reported for AS and Ebp, here we examined if they are co-expressed on the same cells and the functional impact of co-expression on individual cells and within a population. We found that while Ebp are only expressed on a subset of cells, when Ebp and AS are expressed on the same cells, pili interfere with AS-mediated clumping and impede AS-mediated conjugative plasmid transfer during planktonic growth. However, when the population density increases, horizontal gene transfer rates normalize and are no longer affected by pilus expression. Instead, at higher cell densities during biofilm formation, Ebp and AS differentially contribute to biofilm development and structure, synergizing to promote maximal biofilm formation.


mBio ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Helmut Hirt ◽  
Kerryl E. Greenwood-Quaintance ◽  
Melissa J. Karau ◽  
Lisa M. Till ◽  
Purna C. Kashyap ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Cell-cell communication mediated by peptide pheromones (cCF10 [CF]) is essential for high-frequency plasmid transfer in vitro in Enterococcus faecalis. To examine the role of pheromone signaling in vivo, we established either a CF-producing (CF+) recipient or a recipient producing a biologically inactive variant of CF (CF− recipient) in a germfree mouse model 3 days before donor inoculation and determined transfer frequencies of the pheromone-inducible plasmid pCF10. Plasmid transfer was detected in the upper and middle sections of the intestinal tract 5 h after donor inoculation and was highly efficient in the absence of antibiotic selection. The transconjugant/donor ratio reached a maximum level approaching 1 on day 4 in the upper intestinal tract. Plasmid transfer was significantly lower with the CF− recipient. While rescue of the CF− mating defect by coculture with CF+ recipients is easily accomplished in vitro, no extracellular complementation occurred in vivo. This suggests that most pheromone signaling in the gut occurs between recipient and donor cells in very close proximity. Plasmid-bearing cells (donors plus transconjugants) steadily increased in the population from 0.1% after donor inoculation to about 10% at the conclusion of the experiments. This suggests a selective advantage of pCF10 carriage distinct from antibiotic resistance or bacteriocin production. Our results demonstrate that pheromone signaling is required for efficient pCF10 transfer in vivo. In the absence of CF+ recipients, a low level of transfer to CF− recipients occurred in the gut. This may result from low-level host-mediated induction of the donors in the gastrointestinal (GI) tract, similar to that previously observed in serum. IMPORTANCE Horizontal gene transfer is a major factor in the biology of Enterococcus faecalis, an important nosocomial pathogen. Previous studies showing efficient conjugative plasmid transfer in the gastrointestinal (GI) tracts of experimental animals did not examine how the enterococcal sex pheromone response impacts the efficiency of transfer. Our study demonstrates for the first time pheromone-enhanced, high-frequency plasmid transfer of E. faecalis plasmid pCF10 in a mouse model in the absence of antibiotic or bacteriocin selection. Pheromone production by recipients dramatically increased plasmid transfer in germfree mice colonized initially with recipients, followed by donors. The presence of a coresident community of common gut microbes did not significantly reduce in vivo plasmid transfer between enterococcal donors and recipients. In mice colonized with enterococcal recipients, we detected plasmid transfer in the intestinal tract within 5 h of addition of donors, before transconjugants could be cultured from feces. Surprisingly, pCF10 carriage provided a competitive fitness advantage unrelated to antibiotic resistance or bacteriocin production.


mBio ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Benoît Lacroix ◽  
Vitaly Citovsky

ABSTRACTHistorically, the members of theAgrobacteriumgenus have been considered the only bacterial species naturally able to transfer and integrate DNA into the genomes of their eukaryotic hosts. Yet, increasing evidence suggests that this ability to genetically transform eukaryotic host cells might be more widespread in the bacterial world. Indeed, analyses of accumulating genomic data reveal cases of horizontal gene transfer from bacteria to eukaryotes and suggest that it represents a significant force in adaptive evolution of eukaryotic species. Specifically, recent reports indicate that bacteria other thanAgrobacterium, such asBartonella henselae(a zoonotic pathogen),Rhizobium etli(a plant-symbiotic bacterium related toAgrobacterium), or evenEscherichia coli, have the ability to genetically transform their host cells under laboratory conditions. This DNA transfer relies on type IV secretion systems (T4SSs), the molecular machines that transport macromolecules during conjugative plasmid transfer and also during transport of proteins and/or DNA to the eukaryotic recipient cells. In this review article, we explore the extent of possible transfer of genetic information from bacteria to eukaryotic cells as well as the evolutionary implications and potential applications of this transfer.


Author(s):  
Nikolaus Goessweiner-Mohr ◽  
Christian Fercher ◽  
Mohammad Yaser Abajy ◽  
Elisabeth Grohmann ◽  
Walter Keller

Conjugative plasmid transfer is the most important route for the spread of resistance and virulence genes among bacteria. Consequently, bacteria carrying conjugative plasmids are a substantial threat to human health, especially hospitalized patients. Whilst detailed information about the process has been obtained for Gram-negative type-4 secretion systems, little is known about the corresponding mechanisms in Gram-positive (G+) bacteria. The successful purification and crystallization of the putative transfer protein TraN from the G+ conjugative model plasmid pIP501 ofEnterococcus faecalisare presented. Native crystals diffracted to 1.8 Å resolution on a synchrotron beamline. The crystals belonged to space groupP21, with unit-cell parametersa= 32.88,b = 54.94,c= 57.71 Å, β = 91.89° and two molecules per asymmetric unit.


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