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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, May 2009, p. 3370-3372, Vol. 75, No. 10
0099-2240/09/$08.00+0     doi:10.1128/AEM.00039-09
Copyright © 2009, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

A Transferable 20-Kilobase Multiple Drug Resistance-Conferring R Plasmid (pKL0018) from a Fish Pathogen (Lactococcus garvieae) Is Highly Homologous to a Conjugative Multiple Drug Resistance-Conferring Enterococcal Plasmid{triangledown}

Takeshi Maki, Mudjekeewis D. Santos, Hidehiro Kondo, Ikuo Hirono, and Takashi Aoki*

Laboratory of Genome Science, Tokyo University of Marine Science and Technology, Konan 4-5-7, Minato-ku, Tokyo 108-8477, Japan

Received 8 January 2009/ Accepted 9 February 2009


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ABSTRACT
 
Lactococcus garvieae, the causative agent of lactococcosis, has evolved strains that are highly resistant to antibiotics. Here, the 20,034-bp sequence of L. garvieae conjugative plasmid pKL0018 was determined. It contained two ermB genes and one tetS gene and a backbone more than 96% identical to that of pRE25, an Enterococcus faecalis plasmid from dry sausage.


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INTRODUCTION
 
Lactococcus garvieae, a gram-positive bacterium that causes lactococcosis, has caused serious economic damage to fish aquaculture worldwide (11). The appearance of L. garvieae strains resistant to macrolides and tetracycline following antibiotic treatment practices has compounded the problem. The newly acquired resistance was attributed partly to a transferable R plasmid(s) carried by the resistant strains, based on studies done as early as 1990 (1).

Of 170 strains of L. garvieae isolated from cultured Seriola species (yellowtail, amberjack, and kingfish) from nine prefectures in Japan in 2002, most have been reported to have high frequencies of erythromycin (EM), lincomycin (LCM), and oxytetracycline resistance, and all isolates possessed ermB and tetS genes (6). Moreover, the yellowtail-derived L. garvieae isolates appeared to be homogenous and very different from isolates obtained from other fish, terrestrial animals, and food plants (4, 5, 6). Recently, of 146 L. garvieae strains isolated from 1999 to 2006 from yellowtail farms in three prefectures in Japan, 46 strains had high levels of resistance to EM, LCM, and tetracycline and were found to be carrying transferable R plasmids that carry ermB and tetS genes, as evidenced by conjugation, Southern blotting, and PCR methods (7).

In this study, the complete nucleotide sequence of R plasmid pKL0018 from a multiple-drug-resistant, gram-positive L. garvieae strain isolated from yellowtail was determined and analyzed.

L. garvieae strains were cultured in Todd-Hewitt broth (Difco) and 2% NaCl at 25°C. Enterococcus faecalis strain OG1SS was used as recipient cells of R plasmid. The cells were cultured in Todd-Hewitt broth (Difco) at 37°C. R plasmid pKL0018, isolated from EM-, LCM-, and tetracycline-resistant L. garvieae strains from Kagoshima, Japan, in 2000, was sequenced using cloning vector pBluescript (Stratagene).

R plasmid was transferred in mixed culture with E. faecalis OG1SS for 18 h at 37°C and was selected by culture in medium containing 150 µg/ml of streptomycin and 100 µg/ml of EM. Purified plasmid DNA was randomly fragmented by sonication, cloned into the sequencing vector pBluescript (Stratagene), and transformed into Escherichia coli JM109 by electroporation. Clones were then sequenced using a Thermosequenase sequencing kit (Amersham-Biotech) with an LC4200 (Li-Cor) automated DNA sequencer. Data were assembled and analyzed using the ATSQ program in GENETYX v. 7.0 (SDC Software Development Co.), BLASTX of NCBI (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov), ClustalW (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/Tools/clustalw2/), and BLAST 2 sequences (http://ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/blast/bl2seq/wblast2.cgi).


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Sequence of R plasmid pKL0018.
 
The R plasmid pKL0018 contains 20,034 bp (GenBank accession no. AB290882) and contains 21 open reading frames (ORFs) initiated by 18 ATG and 3 TTG start codons, with a computed total G+C content of 32.7% (Table 1).


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TABLE 1. Amino acid and nucleotide sequence identities of putative proteins encoded by pKL0018 (GenBank accession no. AB290882) with other proteins

pKL0018 is generally divided into two regions bounded by two replication proteins. The first region (about 12 kb) is identical at the nucleotide level to two corresponding regions in pRE25: a 3,577-bp block at 96% and a 8,349-bp block at 99.6% (Fig. 1A). Consequently, the ORFs in this region are also identical to each other in amino acid sequence, location, and orientation. Following annotations for pRE25, putative proteins identified in this area include a theta mechanism replication protein, a resolvase, a type I topoisomerase, a macrolide-lincosamide-streptogramin B (MLS) leader peptide, a macrolide resistance protein (23S rRNA methyltransferase [ErmB1]), and 10 hypothetical proteins (Fig. 1B). The second region (about 8 kb) contains a rolling circle replication protein, a transposase, a hypothetical protein, a tetracycline resistance protein [TetS], a duplicate macrolide resistance protein (23S rRNA methyltransferase [ErmB2]), and a copy number control protein (CopS). Also found in this region are a consensus oriT sequence located in between ORF14 and ORF15 and two 10-bp inverted repeats flanking the transposase [tetS] genes (Fig. 1B).


Figure 1
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FIG. 1. Comparison of transferable pKL10018 and pRE25 plasmids. (A) Nucleotide sequence alignment. The 3,577-bp regions (gray boxes) are 96% identical, and the 8,349-bp regions (black boxes) are 99.6% identical. (B) Synteny alignment of ORFs. Putative proteins that are 97 to 100% identical (black arrowheads connected by dotted lines), nonidentical putative proteins (gray arrowheads), inverted 10-bp repeats (open arrows), oriT (as labeled), and drug resistance genes (horizontal bars) are shown.

As mentioned above, the drug resistance genes consist of two macrolide resistance genes and one tetracycline resistance gene (Table 1 and Fig. 1B). Both macrolide resistance genes were classified as ermB genes, differing only in 2 amino acid residues, i.e., residue 75 (Thr to Ile) and residue 99 (Ser to Asn). The tetracycline resistance gene was classified as tetS.

This is a first report of the sequence of a gram-positive bacterium-derived plasmid from a fish pathogen. The nearly identical nucleotide sequences of the 12-kb-region backbone of pKL0018 and the corresponding region in pRE25 clearly suggest that, at the functional level, the two plasmids behave similarly in many aspects (9, 10). The resolvase protein (ORF3) of pKL0018 has 95% homology with the resolvase protein (ORF8) of pRE25 and would therefore function as a site-specific recombinase. The type I topoisomerase (ORF4) in pKL0018 is complete and should fully function for plasmid stability, in contrast to its truncated topoisomerase counterparts in pRE25, which have been suggested to be inactivated. ORF8 to ORF11 of pKL0018 are identical to ORF16 to ORF19 of pRE25, which are believed to be responsible for partitioning and the prevention of the appearance of plasmid-free segregates. CopS (ORF21) of pKL0018 is related to CopS (ORF40) of pRE25, which is suggested to be a regulator of plasmid copy number.

In pRE25, the ORF9 (truncated topoisomerase gene)-ORF10 (cat)-ORF11 (rep) region was reported to have been integrated as a block, with the accompanying insertion elements disappearing with the passage of time (9). This is supported by our findings, since the equivalent topoisomerase (ORF4) is present in full in pKL0018 and since the ORF9-ORF10-ORF11 pRE25 block and possible insertion sequences are missing in pKL0018.

The replication protein (ORF1) of pKL0018 is the same as the replication protein (ORF6) of pRE25, which has been shown to be of the theta mechanism type and is responsible for the replication of pRE25. However, in pKL0018, ORF1 may not be the dominant replicating mechanism, because of the presence of another replication protein (ORF16) at the start of the second 8-kb region of the rolling circle type, which, in small, unstable gram-positive bacterium-derived plasmids, is said to be the mechanism of preference (2, 9). The presence of an oriT consensus sequence upstream of ORF16 further supports the rolling circle replication type of plasmid similar to what has been observed for many transferable plasmids in gram-positive bacteria (3).

ermB1 is located next to an MLS leader peptide, which is known to regulate erm gene expression in the absence of EM (8), in the first 20-kb region, while the ermB2 gene is located in the plasmid's second 12-kb region downstream of the tetracycline resistance gene tetS. The fact that both of the ermB genes of pKL0018 are identical to that of pRE25 suggests that both genes were originally part of the pKL0018 plasmid. In contrast, the tetS gene is flanked upstream by an insertion sequence transposase as well as by two inverted repeats, strongly suggesting that the tetracycline resistance gene has been integrated into pKL0018.

Finally, it is surprising and remarkable that the 12-kb regions in pKL0018 and pRE25 are identical, since the former is isolated from a fish pathogen while the other originated from E. faecalis found in raw fermented sausage (9, 10). This is clear evidence that the two plasmids are directly related and have been propagated by a common plasmid backbone of 12 kb. This further suggests that this plasmid backbone has a broad host range that is capable of disseminating mobile genetic elements containing antibiotic resistance genes in the environment.


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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 
This research was supported in part by the Research and Education Program for Seafood Safety project Special Fund for Education and Research from MEXT (Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan) and grants-in-aid from the Food Safety Commission, Japan.


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FOOTNOTES
 
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Laboratory of Genome Science, Tokyo University of Marine Science and Technology, Konan 4-5-7, Minato-ku, Tokyo 108-8477, Japan. Phone: 81-03-5463-0556. Fax: 81-03-5463-0690. E-mail: aoki{at}kaiyodai.ac.jp Back

{triangledown} Published ahead of print on 13 February 2009. Back


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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, May 2009, p. 3370-3372, Vol. 75, No. 10
0099-2240/09/$08.00+0     doi:10.1128/AEM.00039-09
Copyright © 2009, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.





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