| Literature DB >> 18694482 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Antibiotic resistance genes are widely used for selection of recombinant bacteria, but their use risks contributing to the spread of antibiotic resistance. In particular, the practice is inappropriate for some intrinsically resistant bacteria and in vaccine production, and costly for industrial scale production. Non-antibiotic systems are available, but require mutant host strains, defined media or expensive reagents. An unexplored concept is over-expression of a host essential gene to enable selection in the presence of a chemical inhibitor of the gene product. To test this idea in E. coli, we used the growth essential target gene fabI as the plasmid-borne marker and the biocide triclosan as the selective agent.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18694482 PMCID: PMC2527308 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6750-8-61
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Biotechnol ISSN: 1472-6750 Impact factor: 2.563
Figure 1Vector construction and triclosan selection. (A) The bla gene in pUC19, which confers ampicillin resistance, was replaced with fabI and its promoter region (pFab). The pUC19 multiple cloning site (MCS) is retained, however HincII, HindIII and PstI are not unique in pFab. The fabI cassette in pFab can be transferred to other pUC-derived plasmids using the AatII and AlwNI restriction sites. The fabI cassette was also inserted into the MCS of pUC19 to obtain pUCFA. All plasmids are available from the authors. (B) Growth of pFab and pUCFA clones on LBT and LBA plates. (C) Plasmids propagated in different E. coli hosts were digested with BamHI and analyzed by gel electrophoresis.
Figure 2Effect of . Triclosan resistance mediated by arabinose-induced over-expression of fabI. Exponential growth rates are for DH5α/pBFab1 and DH5α/pBFab6 relative to DH5α/pBAD18s and DH5α/pBAD18, respectively.
Properties of pFab and pUC19
| Parametersa | pUC19 | pFab |
| Transformation efficiencyb (CFU/μg) | 5.5 × 107 ± 1.2 × 107 | 2.2 × 107 ± 3.6 × 106 |
| Plasmid yieldc (μg/ml) | 30 ± 2.1 | 42.9 ± 3.5 |
| Copy numberd | 141 ± 25 | 200 ± 33 |
| Stability (%) | ||
| With selectione | 85.3 ± 10.8 | 99.5 ± 1.5 |
| Without selectionf | 56.7 ± 17.7 | 54.5 ± 14.9 |
| Relative growth rateg (ΔOD/Δt) | ||
| With selection | 1 | 1.2 ± 0.07 |
| Without selection | 1.1 ± 0.05 | 0.6 ± 0.02 |
a Determined from five replicate cultures.
b In chemically competent DH5α cells.
c Plasmid yield from 1 ml of 18 h culture, determined by OD260 absorbance.
d Determined from the copy ratio of lacZα to dxs by qPCR.
e Percentage of plasmid-bearing cells at 48 h in cultures grown with selection.
f Percentage of plasmid-bearing cells at 48 h in cultures grown without selection.
g Change in OD550 over time of DH5α/pUC19 cultures in LB and DH5α/pFab in LB or LBT, relative to control DH5α/pUC19 cultures in LBA.
Figure 3Plasmid production of pFab transformants. (A) Agarose gel electrophoresis of total DNA isolated from five clones of pUC19 and pFab. Bands were quantified by using ImageQuant software to calculate ratio of pDNA to gDNA as a measure of copy number in pUC19 and pFab. (B) Mean ratios of pDNA:gDNA of pUC19 and pFab from (A).
Figure 4Effect of triclosan on growth, viability and fitness pFab transformants. (A) Growth curves for DH5α/pUC19 and DH5α/pFab cultures grown with and without selection. Growth rates were determined from the exponential phase, indicated by arrows. (B) Reduced fitness with fabI over-expression and its suppression by triclosan. Growth rates of pFab and pUCFA clones in LB and LBA, respectively, were calculated relative to DH5α/pUC19 in LBA. (C) Flow cytometric determination of dead cell numbers, as a measure of cell toxicity, in DH5α/pFab cultures grown in the presence of a range of triclosan concentrations. (D) Growth competition between DH5α and DH5α/pUC19 or DH5α/pFab. The log10 ratio of plasmid-bearing cells to total number of cells against time represents the rate of plasmid loss in mixed cell populations. The data is representative of two independent experiments.