| Literature DB >> 35804085 |
Jilong Qin1, Yaoqin Hong2, Karthik Pullela3, Renato Morona4, Ian R Henderson3, Makrina Totsika5.
Abstract
The study of clinically relevant bacterial pathogens relies on molecular and genetic approaches. However, the generally low transformation frequency among natural isolates poses technical hurdles to widely applying common methods in molecular biology, including transformation of large constructs, chromosomal genetic manipulation, and dense mutant library construction. Here we demonstrate that culturing clinical isolates in the presence of polymyxin B nonapeptide (PMBN) improves their transformation frequency via electroporation by up to 100-fold in a dose-dependent and reversible manner. The effect was observed for PMBN-binding uropathogenic Escherichia coli (UPEC) and Salmonella enterica strains but not naturally polymyxin resistant Proteus mirabilis. Using our PMBN electroporation method we show efficient delivery of large plasmid constructs into UPEC, which otherwise failed using a conventional electroporation protocol. Moreover, we show a fivefold increase in the yield of engineered mutant colonies obtained in S. enterica with the widely used lambda-Red recombineering method, when cells are cultured in the presence of PMBN. Lastly, we demonstrate that PMBN treatment can enhance the delivery of DNA-transposase complexes into UPEC and increase transposon mutant yield by eightfold when constructing Transposon Insertion Sequencing (TIS) libraries. Therefore, PMBN can be used as a powerful electropermeabilisation adjuvant to aid the delivery of DNA and DNA-protein complexes into clinically important bacteria.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35804085 PMCID: PMC9270391 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-15997-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.996
Figure 1UPEC growth in the presence of PMBN increases cell electrocompetence in a reversible and dose dependent manner. (a) Representative plate images comparing the yield of pSU2718 plasmid electrotransformants of UPEC strain CFT073 grown without (Nil) or with PMBN (6 µg/ml) prior to electroporation. (b) Transformation frequency, (c) survival rate after electroporation, and (d) transformation efficiency of CFT073 grown with different concentrations of PMBN. (e) Chemical transformation frequency of CFT073 grown in the absence (Nil) or presence of PMBN (6 µg/ml). (f) Electrotransformation frequency of CFT073 grown in the presence of PMBN (4 µg/ml) and then sub-cultured into media devoid of PMBN prior to electroporation (Recover). (g) Electrotransformation frequency of CFT073 grown to OD600 ~ 0.7 and subsequently incubated without (Nil) or with PMBN (1 µg/ml) for 10 min before harvesting and electroporation. Electrotransformation frequency of UPEC strains UTI89 (h) and EC958 (i) grown without or with different concentrations of PMBN. In all experiments, the starting competent cell density was the same between groups. Data from three independent experiments are shown with bars denoting the group mean and error bars the standard error of the mean (mean ± SEM). Tfs transformants.
Figure 2PMBN-mediated effects on electrotransformation frequency of S. typhimurium and P. mirabilis. Electrotransformation frequency of S. Typhimurium SL1344 (a), and uropathogenic P. mirabilis strain PM54 (b) grown in different concentrations of PMBN. In all experiments, the starting competent cell density was the same between groups. Data from three independent experiments are shown with bars denoting the group mean and error bars the standard error of the mean (mean ± SEM). Tfs transformants.
Figure 3Application of the PMBN electroporation method to improving delivery of large size DNA, mutagenesis rates and TIS library yields in Gram-negative clinical isolates. (a) Number of UPEC CFT073 electrotransformants with large plasmid constructs recovered from cultures prepared without (Nil) or with PMBN (1 μg/ml). (b) Comparison of putative ΔoafA::cat mutant cfu yields following λ-Red mutagenesis of S. Typhimurium SL1344 electrocompetent cells without (Nil) or with 1 μg/ml PMBN. (c) Comparison of putative transposon mutant cfu yields in UPEC UTI89 following standard electroporation without PMBN (Nil) or with PMBN (3 μg/ml) treatment. In all experiments, the starting competent cell density was the same between groups. Data from three (a,b) or two (c) independent experiments are summarised in graphs showing mean ± SEM.