| Literature DB >> 30085063 |
Michelle M C Buckner1, Maria Laura Ciusa1, Laura J V Piddock1.
Abstract
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is a global problem hindering treatment of bacterial infections, rendering many aspects of modern medicine less effective. AMR genes (ARGs) are frequently located on plasmids, which are self-replicating elements of DNA. They are often transmissible between bacteria, and some have spread globally. Novel strategies to combat AMR are needed, and plasmid curing and anti-plasmid approaches could reduce ARG prevalence, and sensitise bacteria to antibiotics. We discuss the use of curing agents as laboratory tools including chemicals (e.g. detergents and intercalating agents), drugs used in medicine including ascorbic acid, psychotropic drugs (e.g. chlorpromazine), antibiotics (e.g. aminocoumarins, quinolones and rifampicin) and plant-derived compounds. Novel strategies are examined; these include conjugation inhibitors (e.g. TraE inhibitors, linoleic, oleic, 2-hexadecynoic and tanzawaic acids), systems designed around plasmid incompatibility, phages and CRISPR/Cas-based approaches. Currently, there is a general lack of in vivo curing options. This review highlights this important shortfall, which if filled could provide a promising mechanism to reduce ARG prevalence in humans and animals. Plasmid curing mechanisms which are not suitable for in vivo use could still prove important for reducing the global burden of AMR, as high levels of ARGs exist in the environment.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30085063 PMCID: PMC6199537 DOI: 10.1093/femsre/fuy031
Source DB: PubMed Journal: FEMS Microbiol Rev ISSN: 0168-6445 Impact factor: 16.408
Figure 1.Organisation of two antibiotic resistance plasmids. (A) pCTCTX-M (IncK). Brown, pseudogenes; orange, hypothetic proteins; light pink, insertion sequences; light blue, tra locus; green, pil locus; dark pink, antimicrobial drug resistance gene; yellow, putative sigma factor; red, replication-associated genes. Arrows show the direction of transcription. Reproduced with permission from Cottell et al. (2011). (B) pHNSHP45mcr-1. Light blue, type IV pilus; dark blue, transfer region; yellow, plasmid stability; dark green, plasmid replication; red, insertion sequence; light green, antimicrobial resistance; purple, other proteins; grey, hypothetical proteins. Reproduced with permission from Liu et al. (2016).
Plasmid curing compounds.
| Curing Agent | Species | Plasmid Cured | Key Findings | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acridine orange |
| Small plasmids (UTI isolates) | 75 μg/mL: 11.76% CF for plasmids ≤2.7 mDa | Zaman, Pasha and Akhter ( |
| pBR322 | 100 μg/mL: 35% CF | Keyhani | ||
| pBR325 | 100 μg/mL: 15% CF | Keyhani | ||
| pUK657 | 375 μg/mL: 14.28% CF | Beg and Ahmad ( | ||
|
| AMR plasmid | 0.2 mg/mL cured 6/13 plasmids from isolates (1.2–10kb). | Letchumanan | |
|
| Raffinose & lactose metabolising plasmid | 0.1 mg/mL cured 10/12 plasmids | Adeyemo and Onilude ( | |
|
| Staphyloccocin plasmid | 15 μg/mL: 12.1% CF | Jetten and Vogels ( | |
| pED503 | 15 μg/mL: 3.4% CF | Ersfeld-Dressen, Sahl and Brandis ( | ||
|
| AMR plasmid | 16 μg/mL cured resistance to Ery and Clin | Rotimi, Duerden and Hafiz ( | |
|
| AMR plasmid | 16 μg/mL cured resistance to Ery and Clin | Rotimi, Duerden and Hafiz ( | |
| Acriflavine |
| AMR plasmids | Of plasmids with five resistance phenotypes, 35% CF of | Bouanchaud and Chabbert ( |
|
| AMR plasmid | Three plasmids cured at 5, 12 and 22% CF | Bouanchaud and Chabbert ( | |
| Haemolysin producing plasmids | 24 h incubation with 10 μg/mL resulted in low CF | Mitchell and Kenworthy ( | ||
| Group A | AMR plasmid | 0.2 μg/mL for 18 h: 2.1%–4.3% CF of three plasmids | Nakae, Inoue and Mitsuhashi ( | |
|
| pDR101 | 10 μg/mL for 48 h: 7.2% CF | Chassy, Gibson and Guiffrida ( | |
|
| pLUL631 (lactose fermenting) | 2 μg/mL: 1%–10% CF | Axelsson | |
|
| Staphyloccocin plasmids | 2 μg/mL: 25% CF | Jetten and Vogels ( | |
|
| AMR plasmid | 16 μg/mL, 18–21 days: loss of Ery, Clin and Tet resistance plasmid | Rotimi, Duerden and Hafiz ( | |
|
| AMR plasmid | 16 μg/mL, 18–21 days: loss of Ery, Clin and Tet resistance plasmid | Rotimi, Duerden and Hafiz ( | |
|
| pRS1, pRS2, pRS3 | 2.5–10 μg/Ml, CF of: 18.7% (pRS1), 6.2% (pRS2), 62.5% (pRS3), 31.2% (pRS2 & pRS3 simultaneously) | Mesas, Rodriguez and Alegre ( | |
|
| AMR plasmids | Sub-MIC levels resulted in cured isolates | Coleri | |
|
| AMR plasmids | Sub-MIC levels resulted in cured isolates | Coleri | |
| Ascorbic Acid |
| Penicillinase plasmid | 1 mM for 6 h: 12%–35% CF | Amábile Cuevas ( |
| Aminoglycoside resistance plasmid | 1 mM for 6 h: 4 of six strains cured, with 10%–48% CF | Amábile-Cuevas, Piña-Zentella and Wah-Laborde ( | ||
| pI55cI | 1 mM for 6 h: 48% CF | Amábile-Cuevas, Piña-Zentella and Wah-Laborde ( | ||
|
| Pediocin producing plasmid | 1 mM: 35% CF of 7.8 kb plasmid | Ramesh, Halami and Chandrashekar ( | |
| Bile |
| pSLT | 15% ox bile: 10−6 frequency of plasmid loss in wild type. In | García-Quintanilla |
|
| pESI | 1%–4% bile: reduced CF | Aviv, Rahav and Gal-mor ( | |
| Chlorpromazine |
| F’lac plasmid | 20–60 μg/mL: 5%–20% CF, most efficient at pH 7.6 | Mandi |
| R-factor | 50 μg/mL: plasmid curing was observed | Molnar, Mandi and Kiraly ( | ||
| R114 plasmid | Enhanced curing activity with methylene blue | Molnar | ||
|
| QacA encoding plasmid | Successive passaging in 2–20 mg/mL resulted in curing | Costa | |
| Ethidium bromide |
| Penicillinase carrying plasmids | 8 × 10−6M at pH 7.2: CF of 50% (maximum). 6 × 10−6M: CF average of 20%, ranging from 0.21%–58% depending on plasmid/strain. Curing peaked at 10–12 h, became refractory to additional curing | Bouanchaud, Scavizzi and Chabbert ( |
| Staphyloccocin producing plasmid | 1.25 μg/mL: 94% CF | Jetten and Vogels ( | ||
| pED503 | 3.6 μg/mL: 4.4% CF | Ersfeld-Dressen, Sahl and Brandis ( | ||
| AMR plasmids | 32% and 60% CF for Pen and mercury resistance plasmids | Bouanchaud and Chabbert ( | ||
|
| pKpQIL-like ( | 400–600 μg/mL: 85% CF | Pulcrano | |
|
| AMR plasmids | 100–2000 μg/mL for 1–7 days cured 2/17 strains | Poppe and Gyles ( | |
|
| F’-lac plasmids | 6–250 × 10−5M: 20% CF | Bouanchaud, Scavizzi and Chabbert ( | |
| p424 | 0.52 mM cured plasmid, four cured variants had altered colony morphology and biochemical modifications | Rosas | ||
| pUK651 | 200 μg/mL: 36.6% CF | Beg and Ahmad ( | ||
| Haemolysin producing plasmids | 50 μg/mL: low frequency of plasmid loss at 24 h | Mitchell and Kenworthy ( | ||
| AMR plasmids | 7.5 × 10−5 and 1.3 × 10−3M: CF of 71% and 32%, respectively | Bouanchaud, Scavizzi and Chabbert ( | ||
| AMR plasmids | 32% curing of resistance to five antibiotics | Bouanchaud and Chabbert ( | ||
| UTI plasmids | 125 μg/mL: 17.65% CF | Zaman, Pasha and Akhter ( | ||
|
| Hydrocarbon degrading plasmid | 100 μg/mL: cured isolates enabling testing of plasmid properties | Borah and Yadav ( | |
|
| AMR plasmid | 16 μg/mL cured Ery and Clin resistance. Curing of Tet resistance required 18–21 days | Rotimi, Duerden and Hafiz ( | |
|
| AMR plasmid | 16 μg/mL cured Ery and Clin resistance. Curing of Tet resistance required 18–21 days | Rotimi, Duerden and Hafiz ( | |
| Irgasan (Triclosan) |
| pMIB4 | 100× below MIC cured plasmid. Effective in broth and embedded in silicone hydrogels | Riber |
| Lawsone |
| Van resistance plasmid | 200 μg/mL: 20% CF (1/2 MIC) | Jahagirdar, Patwardhan and Dhakephalkar ( |
| Plumbagin |
| R6K | 200 μg/mL: 42% CF of 2/6 resistance markers | Lakhmi, Padma and Polasa ( |
| TP181 | 100 μg/mL: 100% CF | Lakhmi, Padma and Polasa ( | ||
| R162 | 100 μg/mL: 100% CF | Lakhmi, Padma and Polasa ( | ||
| TP154 | 100 μg/mL: 45% CF of 3/6 resistance markers | Lakhmi, Padma and Polasa ( | ||
| RP4 | 12.5 μg/mL: 32% CF | Bharathi and Polasa ( | ||
| pKT231 | 12.5 μg/mL: 10% CF | Bharathi and Polasa ( | ||
| pTP181-derivatives | 25 μg/mL: 11%–47% CFCaused by interference with plasmid replication and maintenance | Lakshmi and Thomas ( | ||
| pUK651 | 7000 μg/mL: 14% CF (sub-MIC) | (Beg and Ahmad ( | ||
| R plasmid | 1000 μg/mL: 15% CF. | Patwardhan | ||
|
| Van resistance plasmid | 25 μg/mL: 4% CF, 50 μg/mL inhibited growth | Jahagirdar, Patwardhan and Dhakephalkar ( | |
|
| R plasmid | 1000 μg/mL: 13% CF | Patwardhan | |
|
| R plasmid | 500 μg/mL: 32% CF | Patwardhan | |
|
| R plasmid | 500 μg/mL: 30% CF | Patwardhan | |
| Promethazine |
| AMR plasmid | Plasmids eliminated | Spengler |
| F’lac plasmid | At 37°C, 80 μg/mL: 79.6% CF At 39°C, 80 μg/mL: 88% CF Multi-species co-cultures reduced promethazine concentration required for curing | Molnár, Amaral and Molnár ( | ||
| pBR322 | TF-14 (a potential proton pump inhibitor) increased promethazine CF | Wolfart | ||
| Rifampicin |
| Haemolysin plasmids | 2 μg/mL, 24 h incubation led to high CF | Mitchell and Kenworthy ( |
| F’lac | 3–7.5 μg/mL resulted in curing. Rif/RNA polymerase interaction required for curing | Bazzicalupo and Tocchini-Valentini ( | ||
|
| Penicillinase plasmid | 0.1 μg/mL: 20% CF, 0.05 μg/mL: 5% CF | Johnston and Richmond ( | |
| Sodium dodecyl sulphate (SDS) |
| R and F factors | 24 h of 10% SDS: 5.3%–22% CF, 72 h resulted in 95%–100% CF | Tomoeda |
| p424 | 10% cured variants had altered colony morphology and biochemical modifications | Rosas | ||
| pR4 | 100 μg/mL: 12.5% CF | Bharathi and Polasa ( | ||
| pKT231 | 200 μg/mL: 7.5% CF | Bharathi and Polasa ( | ||
| pBR322 | 0.25%–1%: 27%–35% CF | Keyhani | ||
| UTI plasmids | 10% w/v: 7.4% CF | Zaman, Pasha and Akhter ( | ||
|
| Large indigenous plasmid (96 kb) | 4% resulted in 1/8 colonies successfully cured | El-Mansi | |
|
| AMR plasmids | 1% cured 5 of 7 isolates | Lavanya | |
|
| pBC15 | 10% was effective | Raja and Selvam ( | |
|
| Staphyloccocin producing plasmid | 30 μg/mL: 100% CF | Jetten and Vogels ( | |
| Thioridazine |
| AMR plasmid | 75% MIC eliminated resistance | Radhakrishnan |
|
| AMR plasmid | 75% MIC eliminated resistance | Radhakrishnan | |
|
| AMR plasmid | 75% MIC eliminated resistance | Radhakrishnan | |
| Trifluoperazine |
| AMR plasmid | Reviewed in detail by | Spengler |
| 1΄-acetoxychavicol acetate |
| pAR1813 | 400 μg/mL: 32% CF | Latha |
| RP4 | 400 μg/mL: 7% CF | Latha | ||
|
| pAR1814 | 800 μg/mL: 75% CF | Latha | |
|
| pAR1816 | 800 μg/mL: 75% CF | Latha | |
|
| pAR1812 | 400 μg/mL: 66% CF | Latha | |
|
| pAR1817 | 400 μg/mL: 6% CF | Latha | |
| 8-epidiosbulbin E acetate |
| RP4 | 25 μg/mL: 44% CF | Shriram |
| pARI813 | 25 μg/mL: 44% CF | Shriram | ||
|
| pUB110 | 100 μg/mL: 48% CF | Shriram | |
|
| RMS163 | 200 μg/mL: 30% CF | Shriram | |
| RIP64 | 100 μg/mL: 64% CF | Shriram | ||
|
| pARI812 | 200 μg/mL: 48% CF | Shriram | |
|
| pARI815 | 25 μg/mL: 32% CF | Shriram |
CF—Curing Frequency: the proportion of colonies which were cured of the plasmid compared to non-cured colonies. Ery—erythromycin, Clin—clindamycin, Tet—tetracycline, Pen—penicillin, Van—vancomycin, Rif—rifampicin.
Quinolone and aminocoumarin antimicrobials with plasmid curing properties.
| Quinolone | Species | Plasmid cured | Key findings | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ciprofloxacin |
| R446b | 1/2 MIC: no curing, 0.06 μg/mL (sub-MIC): 30% CF | Weisser and Wiedemann ( |
| R386 | 0.07 μg/mL (sub-MIC): 2% CF | Michel-briand | ||
| F’lac | 1/2 MIC: 50% CF | Weisser and Wiedemann ( | ||
| R16 | 1/2 MIC: 1% CF | Weisser and Wiedemann ( | ||
| Rts1 | 1/2 MIC: 32% CF | Weisser and Wiedemann ( | ||
| 5 large plasmids | Sub-MIC: 10%–90% CF. Small high copy plasmids not cured | Platt and Black ( | ||
|
| pWR105 | 0.05 μg/mL (sub-MIC): 50% CF | Michel-briand | |
| Coumermycin A |
| pBR322 | 5 μg/mL: 90% CF, 7 μg/mL: 45% CF. Mechanism involves antagonism of DNA gyrase | Danilevskaya and Gragerov ( |
| pMG110 | 7 μg/mL: 70% CF and mechanism involves antagonism of DNA gyrase. | Wolfson | ||
| pMB9 | 5 μg/mL: 64.7% CF. Cou resistant mutant had 5% CF at 10 μg/mL | Danilevskaya and Gragerov ( | ||
| pOD162 | 5 μg/mL: 64.5% CF | Danilevskaya and Gragerov ( | ||
| pSC101 | 2 μg/mL: 32.5% CF | Danilevskaya and Gragerov ( | ||
| pKT231 | 3.15 μg/mL: 90% CF | Bharathi and Polasa ( | ||
| pRK2013 | 3.15 μg/mL: 35.5% CF | Bharathi and Polasa ( | ||
| Enoxacin |
| R446b | 1/2 MIC: 24% CF, 0.5 μg/mL (sub-MIC): 2% CF | Weisser and Wiedemann ( |
| R386 | 0.05 μg/mL (sub-MIC): 2% CF | Michel-briand | ||
| S-a | 0.5 μg/mL (sub-MIC): 1% CF | Michel-briand | ||
| F’lac | 1/2 MIC: 66% CF | Weisser and Wiedemann ( | ||
| R16 | 1/2 MIC: 11% CF | Weisser and Wiedemann ( | ||
| Rts1 | Sub-MIC concentrations: 98% CF | Weisser and Wiedemann ( | ||
| pORF2 | Sub-MIC concentrations: 43% CF | Fu | ||
|
| pWR105 | 0.12 μg/mL (sub-MIC): 11% CF | Michel-briand | |
| Flumequine |
| R446b | 8 μg/mL (sub-MIC): 2% CF | Michel-briand |
| S-a | 4 μg/mL (sub-MIC): 1% CF | Michel-briand | ||
|
| pWR105 | 0.25 μg/mL (sub-MIC): <1% CF | Michel-briand | |
|
| pWR24 | 0.12 μg/mL (sub-MIC): 2% CF | Michel-briand | |
|
| PWR110 | 0.12 μg/mL (sub-MIC): <1% CF | Michel-briand | |
| Nalidixic Acid |
| pMG110 | 4.3 μM (sub-MIC): 1% CF | Hooper |
| R446b | 1/2 MIC: 8% CF, 64 μg/mL (sub-MIC): 4% CF | Weisser and Wiedemann ( | ||
| F’lac | 1/2 MIC: 18% CF | Weisser and Wiedemann ( | ||
| R16 | 1/2 MIC: 41% CF | Weisser and Wiedemann ( | ||
| Rts1 | 1/2 MIC: 4% CF | Weisser and Wiedemann ( | ||
| pMC1314 | Sub-MIC concentrations of 0.3 μg/mL: 9.6% CF; 0.6 μg/mL: 17% CF; 1.2 μg/mL: 36% CF | Courtright, Turowski and Sonstein ( | ||
| S-a | 32 μg/mL (sub-MIC): 1.5% CF | Michel-briand | ||
|
| pWR105 | 8 μg/mL (sub-MIC): 1% CF | Michel-briand | |
|
| R1 plasmids | 6.25 μM eliminated resistance with CFs of: 70% Kan, 56% Chl, 60% Str, 64% Amp | Hahn and Ciak ( | |
| Norfloxacin |
| R446b | 1/2 MIC: 18% CF, 0.1 μg/mL (sub-MIC): 1% CF | Weisser and Wiedemann ( |
| S-a | 0.25 μg/mL (sub-MIC): 3% CF | Michel-briand | ||
| F’lac | 1/2 MIC: 19% CF | Weisser and Wiedemann ( | ||
| R16 | 1/2 MIC: 25% CF | Weisser and Wiedemann ( | ||
| Rts1 | 1/4 MIC: 52% CF | Weisser and Wiedemann ( | ||
|
| pWR105 | 0.5 μg/mL (sub-MIC): <1% CF | Michel-briand | |
| Novobiocin |
| pDT4 | Novobiocin-sensitive strain was cured, but isogenic resistant strain was not | Taylor and Levine ( |
| pMG110 | 22 μM: 99% CF in wild-type strain, in | Hooper | ||
| R386 | 200 μg/mL: 15% (IncFI) CF | McHugh and Swartz ( | ||
| R1–16 | 175 μg/mL: 34% (IncFII) CF | McHugh and Swartz ( | ||
| R726 | 175 μg/mL: 16.1% (IncH) CF | McHugh and Swartz ( | ||
| pMG102 | 50 μg/mL: 20.3%, 100 μg/mL: 14.7% CF | McHugh and Swartz ( | ||
|
| Virulence plasmid (100 kb) | 200–250 μg/mL used to cure virulence plasmid | Gulig and Curtiss III ( | |
|
| pMG150 | 225 μg/mL: 52.5% CF | McHugh and Swartz ( | |
|
| pJH1 | 8 μg/mL: 34% CF | McHugh and Swartz ( | |
|
| pDR1 | 10 μg/mL: 28% CF | McHugh and Swartz ( | |
|
| Multiple unidentified plasmids (2–68 kb) | 0.125–0.25 μg/mL: 94%–100% CF for four isolates | Ruiz-Barba, Piard and Jiménez-Díaz ( | |
|
| Ery resistance plasmid | 1.8–40 μg/mL (sub-MIC): 64% CF, and 2.1% CF for two strains | Chin | |
|
| Ery resistance plasmids (4.4–11.5 kb) | 1.8–40 μg/mL (sub-MIC): 3.3%–9.0% CF | Chin | |
| Chl resistance plasmid (20.3 kb) | 2.4 μg/mL: 4.6% CF, peaked at 18 h | Karthikeyan and Santosh ( | ||
|
| Cryptic plasmid (7.5 kb) | 4%–30% effective, but optimal concentration inhibited 99% of bacterial growth | O’Connell and Nicks ( | |
| Ofloxacin |
| R446b | 1/2 MIC: 10% CF | Weisser and Wiedemann ( |
| F’lac | 1/2 MIC: 39% CF | Weisser and Wiedemann ( | ||
| R16 | 1/2 MIC: 19% CF | Weisser and Wiedemann ( | ||
| Rts1 | 1/4 MIC: 32% CF | Weisser and Wiedemann ( | ||
| Oxolinic acid |
| pMC1314 | Sub-MIC concentrations of 0.06 μg/mL: 24% CF; 0.12 μg/mL: 36% CF; 0.25 μg/mL: 100% CF | Courtright, Turowski and Sonstein ( |
| Pefloxacin |
| R446b | 1/2 MIC: 21% CF, 0.1 μg/mL(sub-MIC): 1% CF | Weisser and Wiedemann ( |
| F’lac | 1/2 MIC: 6% CF | Weisser and Wiedemann ( | ||
| R16 | 1/2 MIC: 16% CF | Weisser and Wiedemann ( | ||
| Rts1 | 1/2 MIC: 27% CF | Weisser and Wiedemann ( | ||
|
| pWR105 | 1 μg/mL (sub-MIC): 2% CF | Michel-briand | |
|
| pWR24 | 1 μg/mL (sub-MIC): 4% CF | Michel-briand | |
|
| PWR110 | 1 μg/mL (sub-MIC): 4% CF | Michel-briand | |
| Pipemidic acid |
| R446b | 1/2 MIC: 4% CF4 μg/mL (sub-MIC): 6% CF | Weisser and Wiedemann ( |
| F’lac | 1/2 MIC: 35% CF | Weisser and Wiedemann ( | ||
| R16 | 1/2 MIC: 31% CF | Weisser and Wiedemann ( | ||
| Rts1 | 1/2 MIC: 47% CF | Weisser and Wiedemann ( | ||
| R386 | 2 μg/mL (sub-MIC): 0.5% CF | Michel-briand | ||
| S-a | 4 μg/mL (sub-MIC): 1% CF | Michel-briand | ||
|
| pWR105 | 1 μg/mL (sub-MIC): no curing | Michel-briand | |
| Trovafloxacin |
| pT713 (partial) | MIC: 50% CF | Brandi, Falconi and Ripa ( |
| pJEL144 (partial) | ⅓ MIC: 50% CF | Brandi, Falconi and Ripa ( | ||
| pRK2 (partial) | 1/2 MIC: 30% CF. Also reduced copy number | Brandi, Falconi and Ripa ( | ||
| Other Quinolones |
| R446b |
| Michel-briand |
| R386 |
| Michel-briand | ||
| S-a |
| Michel-briand | ||
|
| pWR105 |
| Michel-briand |
CF—Curing Frequency: the proportion of colonies which were cured of the plasmid compared to non-cured colonies. Kan—kanamycin, Chl—chloramphenicol, Str—streptomycin, Amp—ampicillin, Cou—coumermycin.
Incompatibility based curing plasmids.
| Species | Curing plasmid details | Cured Plasmid Details | Key Findings | Delivery | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| 2.1 kb pLp1 endogenous plasmid | Maintained in 5% of bacteria after 20 generations (selection free media). TE: 2 × 10−7 CFU/μg DNA | Electroporation | Bringel, Frey and Hubert ( |
|
|
| 2.3 kb endogenous plasmid | Maintained in 8% of bacteria after 100 generations (selection free media). TE: 102–103 CFU/μg DNA | Electroporation | Posno |
|
| 2.3 kb endogenous plasmid | Maintained in 100% of bacteria after 100 generations (selection free media). TE: 102–103 CFU/μg DNA | Electroporation | Posno | |
|
| 1.7 kb endogenous plasmid | Maintained in <1% of bacteria after 100 generations (selection-free media). TE: 103 | Electroporation | Posno | |
|
|
| pTi-SAKURA (206kb) pTiC58 (214kb) | Between 32% (pTi-SAKURA) and 99% (pTiC58) of transconjugants were cured of pTi | Conjugation | Uraji, Suzuki and Yoshida ( |
|
|
| pPCP1 virulence plasmid (ColE1) | 64% of colonies cured | Electroporation | Ni |
|
| pMT1 virulence plasmid ( | 30% of colonies cured | Electroporation | Ni | |
|
| pCD1 virulence plasmid (IncFIIA) | 98% of colonies cured | Electroporation | Ni | |
|
| pCRY (21.7 kb) cryptic plasmid | 70% of colonies cured | Electroporation | Ni | |
|
|
| pXO1 (181.6 kb) encodes anthrax toxin/regulatory genes ( | Isolate was successfully cured. CF not determined | Electroporation | Liu |
|
| pXO2 (93.5 kb) encodes capsule synthesis and degradation genes ( | Isolate was successfully cured. CF not determined | Electroporation | Wang | |
|
| pXO1 and pXO2 | Isolate was successfully cured. CF not determined | Electroporation | Wang | |
|
|
| pO157 (F-like plasmid) | Isolate was successfully cured. CF not determined | Transformation or mobilisation by IncP-1 transfer system (due to | Hale |
|
| IncF-like plasmids including p1658/97, pKDSC50 (RepFIB and RepFIIA), F and F’ plasmids (RepFIA) | Highly effective on IncF plasmids, CF up to 100%. Inclusion of anti-toxin genes on pCURE2 increased efficacy | Transformation or mobilisation by IncP-1 transfer system (due to | Hale | |
|
| pRK24 (IncP-1α), derivative of RK2 | CF: 100% of tested colonies | Transformation or mobilisation by IncP-1 transfer system (due to | Hale | |
|
| pEI1573 (IncL/M), carries | 30% CF of pEI1573 in | Transformation | Kamruzzaman | |
|
| pEI1573 | 100% CF pEI1573 in | Transformation | Kamruzzaman | |
|
|
| pEI1573, pJIE512b (conjugative IncI1 plasmid with | Cured when curing plasmid was selected for using antibiotics. Cured | Conjugation | Kamruzzaman |
TE—Transformation efficiency of curing plasmid, CF—curing frequency of plasmid, Ery—erythromycin, Amp—ampicillin, Kan—kanamycin.
Figure 2.CRISPR/Cas as an anti-plasmid strategy. (A) CRISPR/Cas systems (purple) which target plasmid encoded genes cause double-stranded breaks in the AMR plasmid, leading to plasmid degradation. In plasmids with toxin (Tox, blue) antitoxin (AT, green) systems, loss of plasmid leads to active toxin. The toxin then mediates cell death, resulting in removal of AMR plasmid carrying bacteria from a population. (B) CRISPR/Cas system prevents uptake of plasmid DNA. Bacteria encoding CRISPR/Cas system that targets plasmid genes degrade incoming DNA, including conjugative (Tra, orange) AMR plasmids, thus preventing spread of AMR palsmids. (C) CRISPR/Cas system combined with lysogenic and lytic phages selects for an antimicrobial sensitive population. Lysogenic phages encoding CRISPR/Cas systems which target both AMR plasmid and lytic phage are administered to bacteria. Production of the CRISPR/Cas system results in degradation of the AMR plasmid, and protection from lytic phages. Administration of lytic phages kills all non-sensitised bacteria, which do not encode the lytic phage resistance, thus producing evolutionary pressure for an antimicrobial sensitive population.