| Literature DB >> 28346467 |
Gang Li1, Shuguang Lu1, Mengyu Shen1, Shuai Le1, Wei Shen1, Yinling Tan1, Jing Wang1, Xia Zhao1, Yan Zhao1, Yali Gong1, Yuhui Yang1, Hongbin Zhu1, Fuquan Hu1, Ming Li1.
Abstract
Prophages are major contributors to horizontal gene transfer and drive the evolution and diversification of bacteria. Here, we describe the characterization of a prophage element designated pp3 in the clinical Pseudomonas aeruginosa isolate PA1. pp3 spontaneously excises from the PA1 genome and circularizes at a very high frequency of 25%. pp3 is likely to be a defective prophage due to its inability to form plaques on P. aeruginosa indicator strains, and no phage particles could be detected in PA1 supernatants. The pp3-encoded integrase is essential for excision by mediating site-specific recombination at the 26-bp attachment sequence. Using a filter mating experiment, we demonstrated that pp3 can transfer into P. aeruginosa recipient strains that do not possess this element naturally. Upon transfer, pp3 integrates into the same attachment site as in PA1 and maintains the ability to excise and circularize. Furthermore, pp3 significantly promotes biofilm formation in the recipient. Sequence alignment reveals that the 26-bp attachment site recognized by pp3 is conserved in all P. aeruginosa strains sequenced to date, making it possible that pp3 could be extensively disseminated in P. aeruginosa. This work improves our understanding of the ways in which prophages influence bacterial behavior and evolution.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28346467 PMCID: PMC5367828 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0174429
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Circular map of the P. aeruginosa PA1 genome.
The outermost concentric ring shown coding sequences (CDS) in blue on the plus (outer) and minus (inner) strands. tRNA genes are shown in light red and rRNA genes in light purple. Proceeding inwards, the next ring shows local GC content in black as a deviation from the average value. GC skew is shown on the next ring using green and purple, and genome coordinates are shown on the innermost ring. The predicted prophage clusters are highlighted in orange.
Predicted prophage clusters in P. aeruginosa strain PA1.
| Name | Position (bp) | Length (kb) | Genes | GC content |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| pp1 | 669527–699926 | 30.4 | 38 | 64.5% |
| pp2 | 1222332–1260747 | 38.4 | 43 | 58.9% |
| pp3 | 1445716–1487567 | 41.9 | 63 | 61.5% |
| pp4 | 3467282–3502456 | 35.1 | 47 | 62.0% |
Fig 2Excision and circularization of pp3 from the PA1 genome.
(A) Schematic of pp3 excision and circularization. Primer pairs D-F/D-R and C-F/C-R are indicated. (B) Detection of pp3-excised PA1 chromosome (lanes labeled D) and circular form (lanes labeled C) of pp3. From left to right, genomic DNAs from strains PA1, PA1Δint3 and PA1Δint3::C were used as PCR templates. Lane M contains DNA size markers. (C) Sequencing of PCR products amplifying across the attB and attP sites upon pp3 excision and circularization. The 26-bp attachment site of pp3 is indicated by a red box.
Fig 3Genetic organization of prophage pp3.
Genes are indicated as arrows showing the direction of transcription. Gray arrows represent genes encoding hypothetical proteins.
Fig 4Interstrain transfer of prophage pp3 between P. aeruginosa strains.
(A) PCR analyses of strains used to test horizontal transfer of pp3 from PA1 to PAO1 (see text for detailed strain descriptions). Lane M contains a DNA size marker. (B) Confirmation of pp3 integration into the predicted attachment site in strain PAO1. The diagram on the left shows the expected PCR products. Lanes marked CF represent the circular form of pp3. Lane M contains a DNA size marker.
Fig 5Biofilm formation is increased by transfer of pp3.
Data are from three independent experiments and are shown as means ± standard deviations. **, P< 0.01.