Applied and Environmental Microbiology, April 2000, p. 1749-1753, Vol. 66, No. 4
0099-2240/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.

Laboratoire de Génétique et Microbiologie, INRA UA952, Faculté des Sciences, Université Henri Poincaré (Nancy 1), 54506 Vandoeuvre-lès-Nancy, France
Received 17 September 1999/Accepted 6 January 2000
| |
ABSTRACT |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The 35.5-kb ICESt1 element of Streptococcus thermophilus CNRZ368 is bordered by a 27-bp repeat and integrated into the 3' end of a gene encoding a putative fructose-1,6-biphosphate aldolase. This element encodes site-specific integrase and excisionase enzymes related to those of conjugative transposons Tn5276 and Tn5252. The integrase was found to be involved in a site-specific excision of a circular form. ICESt1 also encodes putative conjugative transfer proteins related to those of the conjugative transposon Tn916. Therefore, ICESt1 could be or could be derived from an integrative conjugative element.
| |
TEXT |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Cocultures of various lactic acid bacteria are used during the manufacture of dairy products. Sequence comparisons and hybridizations reveal that horizontal transfers between a large array of species of lactic acid bacteria have occurred, most likely during dairy cocultures (13, 32). The most convincing evidence indicates that insertion sequences IS1191, IS981, ISS1, and IS1194 (4, 5, 14) and some open reading frames (ORFs) involved in exopolysaccharide synthesis (6) or in restriction-modification (24) were transferred between the lactic acid bacteria Streptococcus thermophilus and Lactococcus lactis in cocultures used during cheese manufacture. However, the mechanism of genetic exchange between these two species remains unknown, and no conjugative element has been previously characterized in S. thermophilus.
Cloning of var1C and localization of its limits.
The Sm4 fragment of the S. thermophilus CNRZ368 chromosome
was previously found to contain the 35-kb variable region
var1C, which was absent from the corresponding chromosomal
fragments of strains A054 and NST2280 (28). A region
containing an IS1191 copy inserted in a truncated
IS981 element (14) was cloned and found to be
included in var1C (28). Chromosome walking using a
GEM11 genomic library of CNRZ368 (25) was performed to
isolate recombinant
bacteriophages overlapping the var1C
region. Their inserts were subcloned in pBC KS+ and used as
hybridization probes on A054 and NST2280 DNAs. S35, ES27, I132.3, ES13,
and SC02 fragments hybridized to A054 and NST2280 DNAs. On the
contrary, all of the probes covering the 35.5-kb region (except
IS1191 and IS981) and located between the
HindIII sites HL and HR (Fig.
1) did not hybridize to A054 and NST2280
DNAs (data not shown). Furthermore, CNRZ368, A054, and NST2280 showed
identical restriction maps in regions located to the left of the
HindIII site HL and to the right of the
HindIII site HR (Fig. 1). These data
indicated that var1C limits are located near these
HindIII sites. When ES27 including the left end and ES13
including the right end were hybridized to DNAs of the three strains
digested by ClaI, EcoO109, EcoRI, PstI, or XbaI, they revealed the same fragment
from A054 and NST2280, but two different fragments from CNRZ368. Thus,
the flanking regions of var1C in CNRZ368 are adjacent to
each other in strains A054 and NST2280 (Fig. 1).
|
var1C is bordered by a direct repeat and encodes an
integrative system.
Sequencing of the var1C limits
revealed that the element is bordered by a 27-bp direct repeated
sequence (R1) containing a HindIII site (Fig.
2). A 362-bp fragment was obtained by
PCRs performed with the DNA of S. thermophilus A054 by using
the convergent primers O132.3 (GGACTACTAAGAGAACAT) and
O131.2 (TGTTGCTGAATACGAAGC) (Fig.
3). The sequence of this fragment
revealed a unique R1 copy identical to those found on either side of
var1C in CNRZ368 (Fig. 2). Sequence comparison indicates
that R1 direct repeats of CNRZ368 correspond to the boundaries of
var1C (Fig. 2).
|
|
LC3 subgroup of the integrase family
(http://members.home.net/domespo/trhome.html). This subgroup includes a
large array of integrases of temperate bacteriophages and conjugative
transposons of lactic acid bacteria and other gram-positive low-G+C
bacteria. The C terminus of Int contains the five amino acids which are
perfectly conserved in this family (data not shown) (1, 3,
11). Furthermore, xis, located to the left of the
int gene, encodes a small basic protein (pI 9.88) which show
significant similarities to excisionases of two conjugative
transposons, Tn5252 of Streptococcus pneumoniae and Tn5276 of L. lactis (Table 1). int
and xis are located at comparable positions in many
prophages and conjugative transposons.
|
G =
14.8 kcal · mol
1)
(33), preceded by a stretch of A's and followed by a
stretch of T's, could be used as a
-independent transcription
terminator for both int and fda. A perfect 13-bp
inverted repeat, R5 (
G =
18.8 kcal · mol
1), preceded by a stretch of A's, is located 2 bp to
the left of the core of attL (Fig. 1) and could be used as a
transcription termination signal for fda prior to the
var1C integration. Therefore, these data suggest that the
expression of fda would not be changed after
var1C integration.
R3, a perfect 9-bp direct repeat, was found 2 bp downstream from the
stop codon of int (Fig. 1). A copy of this 9-bp sequence was
also found 148 bp to the right of the R1 core of attL. R6, an imperfect 12-bp inverted repeat, and R4, an imperfect 9-bp inverted
repeat, are located 123 and 229 bp to the right of the core of
attL, respectively. R2, R3, R4, and R6 could be binding sites for integrase or host-encoded proteins involved in the recombination.
Detection of site-specific recombination products. A nested PCR was performed to amplify the putative junction between the var1C termini, which could result from a site-specific recombination event between the R1 cores of attL and attR. Nested-PCR amplification was performed with the O132.5 (GATGAAATTCACATCATC)-O131.5 (CAGGAATCGATATTGACA) outer primer pair and the O132.4 (AGTTGAAACTAGACTCAG)-O131.1 (TTCCGACATACGCATATC) inner primer pair (Fig. 3A) according to the method described by Manganelli et al. (21). As expected, no product was identified in strain A054 (Fig. 3B), which does not contain var1C. The sequence of the 536-bp PCR product obtained in CNRZ368 (attI, Fig. 2) is identical to the expected sequence resulting from site-specific recombination between the R1 cores of attL and attR. The PCR product was digoxigenin labelled and hybridized to EcoRI-digested A054 and CNRZ368 chromosomal DNA. As expected, this probe hybridizes with the two fragments containing the var1C termini in CNRZ368, but not with A054 DNA (data not shown). Site-specific excision of var1C in CNRZ368 should also lead to a junction between sequences flanking var1C, identical to that observed in A054. PCR amplification using the O132.3-O131.2 primer pair (Fig. 3A) was performed to detect this junction. PCR products obtained for A054 and CNRZ368 show the same size (Fig. 3B) and restriction map (data not shown).
Detection of these two junction fragments implies in CNRZ368 the excision of a covalent circular molecule in some cells of the population. The R1 sequences found in the chromosome of A054, in the circular form of var1C, and in the ends of integrated var1C probably constitute the core of the attB, attI, attL, and attR attachment sites: the strand exchange reaction probably takes place by crossover events similar to those involved in
integration and excision. The length
of the core of attachment sites suggests that this element would show
very strong insertional site specificity.
Disruption of the int gene prevents var1C excision. The ORF int was disrupted in order to prove its involvement in var1C excision. The thermosensitive plasmid pNST152 was constructed by subcloning the 754-bp HindIII fragment of pNST131.1 containing a fragment of int (region encoding residues 137 to 383 of the integrase) into pG+Host9 (20). pNST152 was used to transform S. thermophilus CNRZ368 by electroporation according to the method of Marciset and Mollet (22). Integration of pNST152 into the int gene was promoted by homologous recombination at a nonpermissive temperature (42°C). The integration site and the number of integrated copies were verified by hybridization of probe I131.1 to PstI patterns of integrants (data not shown). The recombinant strain NST1008 contains two truncated copies of int resulting from the integration of a unique copy of pNST152 within the int gene of CNRZ368. Junction fragments containing attB or attI were not detected in NST1008 by PCR experiments (Fig. 3B), whereas a fragment bearing attR was amplified from NST1008 by using the O131.1 and O131.2 primers (Fig. 3). Therefore, int gene disruption causes the disappearance of the two junction fragments and, therefore, of the covalent circular molecule, showing that this gene is actually involved in var1C excision.
var1C encodes proteins related to those of some conjugative system. The 5,881-bp region located to the left of the xis ORF start codon was sequenced. Four ORFs have been identified by GeneMark (http://genemark.biology.gatech.edu/GeneMark/) and/or by comparison of the putative translation products with proteins from the EMBL/GenBank databases by using BLASTX and BLASTP (2) (Fig. 1 and Table 1). All of these ORFs are preceded by a suitably located ribosome binding site (RBS) (27), have the same orientation as xis and int, and are spaced by very short sequences (Table 1). Therefore, orfDCBA, xis, and int could be translated from a unique transcript.
The orfA and orfD products share significant sequence similarities with proteins involved in conjugative transfer of plasmids from Staphylococcus aureus and Tn916 from Enterococcus faecalis (Table 1). orfC encodes a putative protein weakly related to the translational product of orf15 of the conjugative transposon Tn916. Topology predictions using the HMMTOP server (http://www.enzim.hu/hmmtop/) indicate that the proteins encoded by these two ORFs would be transmembrane proteins with similar tridimensional structures, suggesting that they are actually related. Thus, this region of var1C could encode conjugative functions. Various recently identified elements excise by forming a circular intermediate, promote self-transfer by conjugation into the recipient cell, and integrate by recombination between the specific site of the circular molecule and another site (17, 26, 29, 31). Therefore, the entire var1C sequence could be or could be derived from a site-specific integrative conjugative element. This possible conjugative element, which would be the first isolated in S. thermophilus, was named ICESt1, for integrative conjugative element of S. thermophilus no. 1. The possible conjugative system of ICESt1 is related to that of Tn916, but not to the system encoded by Tn5252. On the contrary, the ICESt1 excisionase is related only to those of Tn5276 and Tn5252. Moreover, the integrases of ICESt1, Tn5276, and Tn5252 belong to the
LC3 integrase subfamily, whereas the
integrase of Tn916 belongs to another subfamily
(http://members.home.net/domespo/trhome.html). Furthermore,
differences in G+C content between the xis and
int genes (about 34%) and orfABCD (about 42%)
of ICESt1 also suggest that the integration-excision system
and the possible conjugative system have different origins or have
undergone very different evolutions. A similar structure is observed in
Tn916 (about 36% G+C for the xis and
int genes versus about 40% G+C for the conjugative system).
This suggests that ICESt1 and Tn916 possess a
modular structure which results from exchanges or acquisitions of
sequences from different sources. This modular structure and evolution
are similar to those of bacteriophages (9, 16) and
enterobacterial plasmids (7).
The large size of ICESt1 (35 kb) suggests that this element,
like Tn5276, which encodes nisin synthesis (26),
could carry industrially attractive genes. The ICESt1
element contains a complete copy of IS1191, an insertion
sequence probably transferred from S. thermophilus to
L. lactis, and a truncated copy of IS981, which was probably transferred from L. lactis to S. thermophilus, most likely in cocultures of these species used
during the manufacture of cheese (14). Furthermore,
conjugative transposons related to ICESt1, like
Tn916 of Enterococcus faecalis and
Tn5252 of S. pneumoniae, are broad-host-range
elements (12, 34). Therefore, ICESt1 or elements
related to ICESt1 could be involved not only in
intraspecific but also in interspecific horizontal transfers between
S. thermophilus and other lactic acid bacteria.
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers. The GenBank accession numbers of the nucleotide sequences reported in this paper are AJ243105 (left terminus of var1C) and AJ243106 (right terminus of var1C).
| |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank E. Maguin for providing the thermosensitive plasmid pG+Host9.
This work was supported by grants from the Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, the University of Nancy 1, and the Ministère de l'Education Nationale, de la Recherche et de la Technologie, France.
| |
FOOTNOTES |
|---|
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Laboratoire de Génétique et Microbiologie, INRA UA952, Université Henri Poincaré (Nancy 1), Faculté des Sciences, BP239, 54506 Vandoeuvre-lès-Nancy, France. Phone: (33) 3 83 91 21 93. Fax: (33) 3 83 91 25 00. E-mail: decaris{at}nancy.inra.fr.
Present address: Department of Medical Microbiology, St.
Bartholomew's Hospital, West Smithfield, London, United Kingdom.
| |
REFERENCES |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| 1. |
Abremski, K. E., and R. H. Hoess.
1992.
Evidence for a second conserved arginine residue in the integrase family of recombination proteins.
Protein Eng.
5:87-91 |
| 2. |
Altschul, S. F.,
T. L. Madden,
A. A. Schäffer,
J. Zhang,
Z. Zhang,
W. Miller, and D. J. Lipman.
1997.
Gapped BLAST and PSI-BLAST: a new generation of protein database search programs.
Nucleic Acids Res.
25:3389-3402 |
| 3. | Argos, P., A. Landy, K. Abremski, J. B. Egan, E. Haggard-Ljungquist, R. H. Hoess, M. L. Kahn, B. Kalionis, S. V. L. Narayana, L. S. Pierson III, N. Sternberg, and J. M. Leong. 1986. The integrase family of site-specific recombinases: regional similarities and global diversity. EMBO J. 5:433-440[Medline]. |
| 4. | Bourgoin, F., G. Guédon, B. Gintz, and B. Decaris. 1998. Characterization of a novel insertion sequence, IS1194, in Streptococcus thermophilus. Plasmid 40:44-49[CrossRef][Medline]. |
| 5. | Bourgoin, F., G. Guédon, M. Pébay, Y. Roussel, C. Panis, and B. Decaris. 1996. Characterization of a mosaic ISS1 element and evidence for the recent horizontal transfer of two different types of ISS1 between Streptococcus thermophilus and Lactococcus lactis. Gene 178:15-23[CrossRef][Medline]. |
| 6. | Bourgoin, F., A. Pluvinet, B. Gintz, B. Decaris, and G. Guédon. 1999. Are horizontal transfers involved in the evolution of the Streptococcus thermophilus exopolysaccharide synthesis loci? Gene 233:151-161[CrossRef][Medline]. |
| 7. | Boyd, E. F., C. W. Hill, S. M. Rich, and D. L. Hartl. 1996. Mosaic structure of plasmids from natural population of Escherichia coli. Genetics 143:1091-1100[Abstract]. |
| 8. |
Brown, D. P.,
K. B. Idler, and L. Katz.
1990.
Characterization of the genetic elements required for site-specific integration of plasmid pSE211 in Saccharopolyspora erythraea.
J. Bacteriol.
172:1877-1888 |
| 9. |
Brüssow, H.,
A. Bruttin,
F. Desiere,
S. Lucchini, and S. Foley.
1998.
Molecular ecology and evolution of Streptococcus thermophilus bacteriophages a review.
Virus Genes
16:95-109[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 10. |
Campbell, A. M.
1992.
Chromosomal insertion sites for phages and plasmids.
J. Bacteriol.
174:7495-7499 |
| 11. |
Caroll, D.,
M. A. Kehoe,
D. Cavanagh, and D. C. Coleman.
1995.
Novel organization of the site-specific integration and excision recombination functions of the Staphylococcus aureus serotype F virulence-converting phages 13 and 42.
Mol. Microbiol.
16:877-893[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 12. | Celli, J., C. Poyart, and P. Trieu-Cuot. 1997. Use of an excision reporter plasmid to study the intracellular mobility of the conjugative transposon Tn916 in Gram-positive bacteria. Microbiology 143:1253-1261[Abstract]. |
| 13. | Guédon, G., F. Bourgoin, and B. Decaris. 1998. Does gene horizontal transfer occur in lactic acid bacteria co-cultures? Lait 78:53-58. |
| 14. | Guédon, G., F. Bourgoin, M. Pébay, Y. Roussel, C. Colmin, J. M. Simonet, and B. Decaris. 1995. Characterization and distribution of two insertion sequences, IS1191 and iso-IS981, in Streptococcus thermophilus: does intergeneric transfer of insertion sequences occur in lactic acid bacteria co-cultures? Mol. Microbiol. 16:69-78[CrossRef][Medline]. |
| 15. | Hacker, J., G. Blum-Oehler, I. Mühldorfer, and H. Tschäpe. 1997. Pathogenicity islands of virulent bacteria: structure, function and impact on microbial evolution. Mol. Microbiol. 23:1089-1097[CrossRef][Medline]. |
| 16. |
Hendrix, R. W.,
M. C. M. Smith,
R. N. Burns,
M. E. Ford, and G. F. Hatfull.
1999.
Evolutionary relationships among diverse bacteriophages and prophages: all the world's a phage.
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
96:2192-2197 |
| 17. |
Hochhut, B.,
K. Jahreis,
J. W. Lengeler, and K. Schmid.
1997.
CTnscr94, a conjugative transposon found in enterobacteria.
J. Bacteriol.
179:2097-2102 |
| 18. |
Lillehaug, D., and N.-K. Birkeland.
1993.
Characterization of genetic elements required for site-specific integration of the temperate lactococcal bacteriophage LC3 and construction of integration-negative LC3 mutants.
J. Bacteriol.
175:1745-1755 |
| 19. |
Lu, F., and G. Churchward.
1995.
Tn916 target DNA sequences bind the C-terminal domain of integrase protein with different affinities that correlate with transposon insertion frequency.
J. Bacteriol.
177:1938-1946 |
| 20. |
Maguin, E.,
H. Prévost,
S. D. Ehrlich, and A. Gruss.
1996.
Efficient insertional mutagenesis in lactococci and other gram-positive bacteria.
J. Bacteriol.
178:931-935 |
| 21. | Manganelli, R., L. Romano, S. Ricci, M. Zazzi, and G. Pozzi. 1995. Dosage of Tn916 circular intermediates in Enterococcus faecalis. Plasmid 34:48-57[CrossRef][Medline]. |
| 22. | Marciset, O., and B. Mollet. 1994. Multifactorial experimental designs for optimizing transformation: electroporation of Streptococcus thermophilus. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 43:490-496[CrossRef]. |
| 23. | McShan, W. M., Y. F. Tang, and J. J. Ferretti. 1997. Bacteriophage T12 of Streptococcus pyogenes integrates into the gene encoding a serine tRNA. Mol. Microbiol. 23:719-728[CrossRef][Medline]. |
| 24. | O'Sullivan, T., D. Van Sinderen, and G. Fitzgerald. 1999. Structural and functional analysis of pCI65st, a 6.5 kb plasmid from Streptococcus thermophilus NDI-6. Microbiology 145:127-134[Abstract]. |
| 25. | Pébay, M., Y. Roussel, J.-M. Simonet, and B. Decaris. 1992. High-frequency deletion involving closely spaced rRNA gene sets in Streptococcus thermophilus. FEMS Microbiol. Lett. 98:51-56[CrossRef]. |
| 26. |
Rauch, P. J. G., and W. M. De Vos.
1992.
Characterization of the novel nisin-sucrose conjugative transposon Tn5276 and its insertion in Lactococcus lactis.
J. Bacteriol.
174:1280-1287 |
| 27. |
Rocha, E. P. C.,
A. Danchin, and A. Viari.
1999.
Translation in Bacillus subtilis: roles and trends of initiation and termination, insights from a genome analysis.
Nucleic Acids Res.
27:3567-3576 |
| 28. | Roussel, Y., F. Bourgoin, G. Guédon, M. Pébay, and B. Decaris. 1997. Analysis of the genetic polymorphism between three Streptococcus thermophilus strains by comparing their physical and genetic organization. Microbiology 143:1335-1343[Abstract]. |
| 29. | Scott, J. R., and G. G. Churchward. 1995. Conjugative transposition. Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 49:367-397[CrossRef][Medline]. |
| 30. |
Shoemaker, N. B.,
G.-R. Wang, and A. A. Salyers.
1996.
The Bacteroides mobilizable insertion element, NBU1, integrates into the 3' end of a Leu-tRNA gene and has an integrase that is a member of the lambda integrase family.
J. Bacteriol.
178:3594-3600 |
| 31. |
Sullivan, J. T., and C. W. Ronson.
1998.
Evolution of rhizobia by acquisition of a 500-kb symbiosis island that integrates into a phe-tRNA gene.
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
95:5145-5149 |
| 32. | Teuber, M., L. Meile, and F. Schwarz. 1999. Acquired antibiotic resistance in lactic acid bacteria from food. Antonie Leeuwenhoek 76:115-137. |
| 33. | Tinoco, I., P. N. Borer, B. Dengler, M. D. Levin, O. C. Uhlenbeck, D. M. Crothers, and J. Bralla. 1973. Improved estimation of secondary structure in ribonucleic acids. Nature 246:40-41. |
| 34. |
Vijayakumar, M. N., and S. Ayalew.
1993.
Nucleotide sequence analysis of the termini and chromosomal locus involved in site-specific integration of the streptococcal conjugative transposon Tn5252.
J. Bacteriol.
175:2713-2719 |
This article has been cited by other articles:
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| J. Bacteriol. | Microbiol. Mol. Biol. Rev. | Eukaryot. Cell | All ASM Journals |
|---|