| Literature DB >> 24751825 |
Andrew Cameron1, Erin C Gaynor1.
Abstract
Campylobacter jejuni genetic manipulation is restricted by the limited number of antibiotic resistance cassettes available for use in this diarrheal pathogen. In this study, two antibiotic resistance cassettes were developed, encoding for hygromycin B and apramycin resistance, for use in mutagenesis or for selection of gene expression and complementation constructs in C. jejuni. First, the marker genes were successfully modified to allow for insertional mutagenesis or deletion of a gene-of-interest, and were bracketed with restriction sites for the facilitation of site-specific cloning. These hygromycin B and apramycin markers are encoded by plasmids pAC1H and pAC1A, respectively. We also modified an insertional gene-delivery vector to create pRRH and pRRA, containing the hygromycin B and apramycin resistance genes, and 3 unique restriction sites for the directional introduction of genes into the conserved multi-copy rRNA gene clusters of the C. jejuni chromosome. We determined the effective antibiotic concentrations required for selection, and established that no harmful effects or fitness costs were associated with carrying hygromycin B or apramycin resistance under standard C. jejuni laboratory conditions. Using these markers, the arylsulfatase reporter gene astA was deleted, and the ability to genetically complement the astA deletion using pRRH and pRRA for astA gene insertion was demonstrated. Furthermore, the relative levels of expression from the endogenous astA promoter were compared to that of polycistronic mRNA expression from the constitutive promoter upstream of the resistance gene. The development of additional antibiotic resistance cassettes for use in Campylobacter will enable multiple gene deletion and expression combinations as well as more in-depth study of multi-gene systems important for the survival and pathogenesis of this important bacterium.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24751825 PMCID: PMC3994027 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0095084
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Bacterial strains or plasmids used in this study.
| Strain or plasmid | Genotype or description | Source |
|
| ||
| DH5α | F-, φ80d | Invitrogen |
|
| ||
| 81–176 | Wild type isolated from a diarrheic patient |
|
| 81–176 pRRH | Strain 81–176 with genome-integrated pRRH; | This study |
| 81–176 pRRA | Strain 81–176 with genome-integrated pRRA; | This study |
| 81–176 pRRC | Strain 81–176 with genome-integrated pRRC; | This study |
| 81–176 pRRK | Strain 81–176 with genome-integrated pRRK; | This study |
| 81–176 Δ | Deletion of | This study |
| 81–176 Δ | Deletion of | This study |
| DRH461 | Strain 81–176 with an unmarked deletion of |
|
| DRH461 pRRH+ | DRH461 with integrated pRRH and polycistronic promoterless | This study |
| DRH461 pRRA+ | DRH461 with integrated pRRA and polycistronic promoterless | This study |
| DRH461 pRRH+ | DRH461 with integrated pRRH and reverse orientation promoterless | This study |
| DRH461 pRRA+ | DRH461 with integrated pRRA and reverse orientation promoterless | This study |
| DRH461 pRRH+(p) | DRH461 with integrated pRRH and reverse orientation endogenous promoter and | This study |
| DRH461 pRRA+(p) | DRH461 with integrated pRRA and reverse orientation endogenous promoter and | This study |
|
| ||
| pMV261.hyg | Source of |
|
| p261comp.apra | Source of |
|
| pGEM-T | Linearized cloning vector, blue-white screening; | Novagen |
| pBAD24 | Low-copy arabinose-inducible expression vector; |
|
| pAC1H | pBAD24 ligated to | This study |
| pAC1A | pGEM-T ligated to | This study |
| pRRC |
|
|
| pRRK |
| J. Ketley |
| pRRH |
| This study |
| pRRA |
| This study |
| pGEM-T+ | pGEM-T ligated to | This study |
| pGEM-T+ | pGEM-T with | This study |
| pGEM-T+ | pGEM-T with | This study |
| pRRH+ | pRRH ligated to | This study |
| pRRA+ | pRRA ligated to | This study |
| pRRH+ | pRRH ligated to | This study |
| pRRA+ | pRRA ligated to | This study |
| pRRH+(p) | pRRH ligated to | This study |
| pRRA+(p) | pRRA ligated to | This study |
Oligonucleotides used in this study (with restriction sites underlined).
| Primer | Sequence 5′-3′ | Target, sense anddescription | Restrictionsites |
| 5631 |
|
|
|
| 5632 |
|
|
|
| 5633 |
|
|
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| 5634 |
|
|
|
| 5705 |
| pRRC |
|
| 5706 |
| pRRC | |
| 5707 |
| Flanking | |
| 5708 |
| Flanking | |
| 5709 |
| 5′-internal |
|
| 5710 |
| 3″-internal |
|
| 0688 |
| Promoterless |
|
| 0689 |
|
|
|
| 0690 |
| Promoterless |
|
| 0691 |
|
|
|
| 0692 |
| Upstream |
|
Figure 1Synthesis of plasmids containing aph(7″) or aac(3)IV as non-polar hygromycin B and apramycin resistance markers.
(A) Schematic of ultramers designed to amplify aph(7″) or aac(3)IV. The 5′ ultramers 5631 and 5633, for aph(7″) or aac(3)IV respectively, include MfeI, KpnI and SmaI restriction sites, stop codons in all three reading frames, and a ribosome binding site. The 3′ ultramers 5632 and 5634 include a ribosome binding site, a start codon in-frame with restriction sites for SmaI and BamHI, and restriction sites for XbaI, NdeI, PstI and SphI. (B) The amplified aac(3)IV was introduced by TA cloning into linearized pGEM-T, conserving the restriction sites in the pGEM-T multiple cloning site (MCS). The resulting plasmid is pAC1A. The pGEM sites may also be used for the sub-cloning of the apramycin resistance marker (Apr). MCS sites that cut aac(3)IV are indicated with a superscript ‘A’. (C) All introduced sites in pAC1A were tested by restriction digest. (D) The MfeI- and SphI-digested aph(7″) amplification product was cloned into pBAD24 digested with EcoRI (MfeI-compatible) and SphI. The MfeI site was lost in the resulting plasmid, pAC1H. (E) All restriction sites introduced to pAC1H were tested by digest.
Figure 2Adaptation of the pRRC gene delivery and expression system to harbor hygromycin B or apramycin resistance, and testing of genome-integrated markers for detrimental effects of resistance genes.
(A) Schematic of pRRC, which inserts into any of 3 rRNA clusters in the genome by homologous recombination. (B) Inverse PCR amplification of pRRC with primers 5705 (KpnI) and 5706 deleted the chloramphenicol resistance gene but conserved the Campylobacter-optimized cat promoter. (C) The inverse PCR product was digested with KpnI and XbaI, and ligated to similarly digested aph(7″) or aac(3)IV from pAC1H or pAC1A to create pRRH and pRRA respectively (only pRRH is shown). (D) Restriction digest analysis confirmed the function of all introduced sites. (E) The resistance markers from pRRK, pRRC, pRRH and pRRA were inserted into the C. jejuni 81–176 genome, and each resulting strain was analyzed for microaerobic growth and survival in shaken Mueller-Hinton (MH) broth by counting CFU over 48 hours at both 42°C (left panel) and 37°C (right panel). (F) To determine if the introduction of either marker contributed any fitness cost that could affect competitiveness against wild-type or the other marked strains, a competition assay was performed. Equal numbers of wild-type marked with hygromycin, apramycin, chloramphenicol and kanamycin resistance markers were co-cultured with unmarked wild-type in shaking MH broth at 37°C under microaerobic conditions. CFU were assessed by plating a dilution series on MH agar. (G) CFU were further assessed from the co-culture by plating on MH only (the total CFU, same data as in F) or MH supplemented with each antibiotic, representing the number of bacteria resistant to each antibiotic.
Figure 3Mutagenesis of the arylsulfatase gene astA with aph(7″) or aac(3)IV non-polar markers and complementation of ΔastA via genomic insertion with pRRH or pRRA.
(A) Loci arrangement of astA single-gene operon in C. jejuni 81–176. (B) Deletion of astA with either aph(7″) or aac(3)IV from pAC1H or pAC1H. (C) Introduction of promoterless astA into pRRH or pRRA in the same orientation as the cat promoter created pRRH+astA or pRRA+astA and resulted in polycistronic expression of astA with aph(7″) or aac(3)IV. (D) Promoterless astA inserted in the opposite orientation to the cat promoter (designated pRRH+astA (reverse) or pRRA+astA (reverse) (E) Insertion of the endogenous astA promoter and astA in the opposite orientation to the cat promoter in pRRH and pRRA created pRRH+(p)astA (reverse) and pRRA+(p)astA (reverse). Only Hyg plasmids/strains are depicted in B–E, but both Hyg and Apr plasmids represented with Hyg in C, D and E were integrated into the genome of the ΔastA strain, DRH461. (F) Arylsulfatase activity of the deletion and complementation strains was assessed by spotting 10 µL of OD-standardized cultures onto MH agar plates supplemented with the chromogen XS cleaved by arylsulfatase. A blue-green color indicates activity, and the spots correspond to labels on the bar graph below. (G) Quantification of arylsulfatase activity from broth cultures to assess transcription of astA.