| Literature DB >> 24367362 |
Rita A Rapa1, Maurizio Labbate1.
Abstract
The integron is a genetic element that incorporates mobile genes termed gene cassettes into a reserved genetic site via site-specific recombination. It is best known for its role in antibiotic resistance with one type of integron, the class 1 integron, a major player in the dissemination of antibiotic resistance genes across Gram negative pathogens and commensals. However, integrons are ancient structures with over 100 classes (including class 1) present in bacteria from the broader environment. While, the class 1 integron is only one example of an integron being mobilized into the clinical environment, it is by far the most successful. Unlike clinical class 1 integrons which are largely found on plasmids, other integron classes are found on the chromosomes of bacteria and carry diverse gene cassettes indicating a non-antibiotic resistance role(s). However, there is very limited knowledge on what these alternative roles are. This is particularly relevant to Vibrio species where gene cassettes make up approximately 1-3% of their entire genome. In this review, we discuss how emphasis on class 1 integron research has resulted in a limited understanding by the wider research community on the role of integrons in the broader environment. This has the capacity to be counterproductive in solving or improving the antibiotic resistance problem into the future. Furthermore, there is still a significant lack of knowledge on how gene cassettes in Vibrio species drive adaptation and evolution. From research in Vibrio rotiferianus DAT722, new insight into how gene cassettes affect cellular physiology offers new alternative roles for the gene cassette resource. At least a subset of gene cassettes are involved in host surface polysaccharide modification suggesting that gene cassettes may be important in processes such as bacteriophage resistance, adhesion/biofilm formation, protection from grazers and bacterial aggregation.Entities:
Keywords: Vibrio; gene cassette; integron; lateral gene transfer; mobile DNA; mobile genes; mobile genetic elements
Year: 2013 PMID: 24367362 PMCID: PMC3856429 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2013.00385
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Non-antibiotic resistance and experimentally confirmed functional ORFs in gene cassettes.
| Source of cassette | Function | Determination of function | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sulfate-binding protein | Complementation of | ||
| Transcriptional regulation | Crystal structure determination and drug binding assay | ||
| Heat stable enterotoxin | Active in suckling mouse assay when expressed in | ||
| Mannose–fucose resistant hemagglutinin | Mutagenesis | ||
| Psychrophilic lipase | Active when expressed in | ||
| Cold shock | Complementation of cold shock phenotype in | ||
| Secretion | Expression in | ||
| dNTP-pyrophosphohydrolase (iMazG) | Crystal structure determination. Expressed in | ||
| Various large cassette arrays like this in | Toxin/antitoxin (TA) genes | Demonstration that presence of TA genes limits deletions in large cassette arrays | |
| Capsular polysaccharide biosynthesis | Transposon mutagenesis | ||
| Porin regulation | Deletion of cassette | ||
| Surface polysaccharide modification | Deletion of cassettes | ||
| Soil metagenomic DNA | Potential transport protein | Crystal structure determination | |
| Soil metagenomic DNA | ATPase activity | Expressed in | |
| Soil metagenomic DNA | Methyltransferase activity | Expressed in |