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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, March 2009, p. 1331-1338, Vol. 75, No. 5
0099-2240/09/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.01914-08
Copyright © 2009, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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Université Paris Descartes, Faculté de Médecine Paris Descartes, F-75730 Paris Cedex 15, France,1 INSERM, U570, Unité de Pathogénie des Infections Systémiques, F-75730 Paris Cedex 15, France2
Received 18 August 2008/ Accepted 19 December 2008
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7%) using the recombineering system. These observations will facilitate genetic and cellular microbiology experiments involving the construction and use of well-defined mutants to study the virulence determinant of this emerging pathogen. |
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The availability of genomic resources and animal models (32) makes M. abscessus a very attractive system. However, there is no defined mutagenesis system for this species and, to the best of our knowledge, no defined mutants have been constructed thus far. The consequence is that the study of this organism has been restricted to spontaneous variants. Utilization of spontaneous mutants has, nevertheless, allowed the characterization of morphotypically rough isolates that are hypervirulent both in vitro and in vivo (7, 8, 17). These rough isolates are low glycopeptidolipid producers. Glycopeptidolipid is an extractable lipid found at the surface of the bacilli (4, 11, 13). However, its role in the virulence process is currently unknown. The lack of a suitable genetic system is certainly responsible for the rarity of studies on this species (fewer than 500 references in Medline, whereas there are more than 32,000 for M. tuberculosis). Other mycobacterial species, especially M. tuberculosis, have been genetically intractable for many years (15, 18, 24). This has forced researchers to develop dedicated systems for the construction of allelic-exchange mutants. Three major systems have mainly been used thus far in M. tuberculosis and in other mycobacteria: (i) a thermosensitive counterselectable plasmid based on sucrose sensitivity (21-23), (ii) a thermosensitive mycobacteriophage (2) and, more recently, (iii) a mycobacterial recombinase-based system (43, 44). These three systems are effective in M. tuberculosis, M. smegmatis, and other refractory species, including M. avium subsp. avium, and allow straightforward construction of both marked and unmarked mutants.
The aim of the present study was to compare the three main mutagenesis systems available for mycobacteria and to determine which system is best adapted to M. abscessus. To this end, we used mmpL4b as a target gene and the three genetic tools described above. The mmpL4b gene is involved in glycopeptidolipid synthesis (29, 40) and is a good model target because its mutation results in a rough phenotype that can be visually distinguished. We show here that there are large differences in efficacy between the three systems and that the mycobacterial recombinase-based system is the most efficient. For an unknown reason, allelic exchange is much less frequent in M. abscessus than in other species, including M. tuberculosis; this complicates the construction of defined mutants. The availability of a suitable genetic system will undoubtedly facilitates the characterization of the virulence determinants in this emerging pathogen.
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and HB101 strains were used for cloning and grown as previously described (34). M. smegmatis mc2155 (39) and M. abscessus CIP104536T (8) strains were grown in LB or 7H9 (Difco) medium. When required, antibiotics were added to the medium at the following final concentration: kanamycin, 25 µg/ml; zeocin, 25 µg/ml; gentamicin, 20 µg/ml for E. coli and M. smegmatis mc2155; and 100 µg/ml of each for M. abscessus CIP104536T.
Construction of the allelic-exchange substrate of mmpL4b gene.
The plasmids and primers used in the present study are listed in Table 1 and Table S2 in the supplemental material, respectively. The marked mutation construct of mmpL4b gene (MAB_4115c) was generated by PCR, using genomic DNA of M. abscessus CIP104536T as a template. Primer pair mmpL4B1_F and mmpL4B1_Rv, containing EcoRI and SalI sites, respectively, were used to amplify a fragment (fragment 1) encoding N-terminal amino acids 1 to 3, along with a 908-bp sequence upstream of the mmpL4b gene. Similarly, the primers mmpL4B2_F and mmpL4B2_Rv, containing the SalI and ApaI sites, respectively, were used to amplify a fragment (fragment 2) encoding amino acids 985 to 987, along with a 950-bp region downstream of the mmpL4b gene. Fragment 1 and fragment 2 were digested by either EcoRI/SalI or SalI/ApaI (Biolabs) and cloned in a EcoRI-ApaI-digested pBluescript II SK(+) (Stratagene) to generate pBSK-
mmpL4b. The kanamycin cassette was extracted from the pUC4K vector (Pharmacia biotech) by SalI digestion, purified, and cloned into the SalI of the pBSK-
mmpL4b to generate the pBSK-
mmpL4b::Km. This allelic-exchange substrate was used to perform mutagenesis in M. abscessus and M. smegmatis. It should be noted that the identity at the DNA level between the mmpL4a genes of M. abscessus and M. smegmatis is 76% (fragment 1), whereas it is 78% for fragment 2 (31).
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TABLE 1. Plasmids used in this study
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mmpL4b::Km used in the present study was constructed as follows. The allelic-exchange substrate for the mmpL4b gene was obtained by PCR amplification using the mmpL4B1_F (XbaI) and mmpL4B2_Rv (XbaI) primer pair and pBSK-
mmpL4b::Km as a template. The purified PCR fragment was digested with XbaI and cloned into the unique XbaI site of dephosphorylated pPR27 vector to generate pPR27-
mmpL4b::Km. This construct was used to electroporate M. abscessus CIP104536T and M. smegmatis mc2155. Transformants were selected on LB agar plates containing kanamycin and gentamicin at 30°C, colony purified, and inoculated into LB containing kanamycin and gentamicin at 30°C for 5 days. Cells were then plated on LB agar plates containing kanamycin and 10% (wt/vol) sucrose, followed by incubation for 4 days at 39°C. Plasmid pPR27-
mmpL4b::Km was extracted from the transformants of M. abscessus by electroduction (3). The frequency of counterselection was calculated as described previously (22, 23).
(ii) Mycobacteriophage system.
The allelic-exchange substrate for the mmpL4b gene was extracted by XbaI restriction of pPR27-
mmpL4b::Km and cloned at the compatible SpeI and XbaI sites of the cosmid vector pJSC347 (33), generating pJSC347-
mmpL4b::Km. To generate each specialized transducing phage, the PacI-digested pJSC347-
mmpL4b::Km was cloned in PacI-digested phAE87 DNA and packaged in vitro by using a MaxPlax packaging extracts kit (Tebu-Bio) as previously reported (19). E. coli HB101 was transduced and plated on selective media containing kanamycin. Phagemid DNA was prepared from a pool of antibiotic-resistant transductants and electroporated into M. smegmatis mc2155 to produce recombinant phage particles. All transducing phages were plaque purified and tested for their temperature-sensitive phenotype. M. smegmatis mc2155 and M. abscessus CIP104536T were grown in LB medium (with 0.5% of Tween 80) to an optical density at 600 nm of 1. A 10-ml portion of the culture was centrifuged, resuspended in 10 ml of washing medium 7H9 broth (Difco) with 0.2% glycerol-1x albumin dextrose saline and incubated as standing culture for 24 h at 37°C to remove all traces of Tween 80 detergent. After incubation, bacterial cells were centrifuged and resuspended in 10 ml of 7H9-albumin dextrose saline and then mixed with the specialized transducing phage at a multiplicity of infection of 10. The cell-phage mix was incubated at a nonpermissive temperature for 30 min for M. smegmatis mc2155 and for 2 h for M. abscessus, centrifuged, resuspended in 1 ml of phosphate-buffered saline containing 0.1% Tween 80, and plated on selective medium containing kanamycin.
(iii) Recombineering system.
This system is based on the use of a plasmid allowing the expression of an inducible phage recombinase, which is more effective at promoting homologous recombination than the endogenous recombinase. The strain containing the plasmid is then electroporated with a linear DNA fragment containing the mutant allele and plated on selective medium.
The kanamycin cassette of pJV53 (44) was replaced with the zeocin cassette, which was PCR amplified using primer pair Zeo_F and Zeo_Rv and pLYG204.Zeo as a template (14). Plasmid pJV53 was SpeI and NheI digested, blunted, and ligated to the zeocin PCR product to generate pJV53-zeo. pJV53-zeo was electroporated into M. smegmatis mc2155 and M. abscessus CIP104536T. The allelic-exchange substrate of mmpL4b gene of M. abscessus was extracted by XbaI digestion of pPR27-
mmpL4b::Km and purified. The strains containing the pJV53-zeo construct were cultured overnight at 37°C in LB medium containing zeocin and 0.2% succinate. At an optical density at 600 nm of
0.5, acetamide (0.2%) was added, and electrocompetent cells were prepared after 3 h of induction as described previously (44). The competent cells were transformed with 100 ng of allelic-exchange substrate of mmpL4b gene and treated as previously described (44).
Southern blot analysis.
The genomic DNA of M. smegmatis and M. abscessus strains was extracted, digested with SalI (for M. abscessus) or PstI (for M. smegmatis), run on a 1% agarose gel, and electrotransferred. The nitrocellulose membrane was probed with a fragment corresponding to the upstream region of mmpL4b (908 bp). In the case of M. smegmatis, the genomic DNA was probed with a fragment corresponding to the downstream region of mmpL4b (1,093 bp).
Biochemical analysis.
Lipids were extracted from bacterial cell pellets with a mixture of chloroform and methanol as previously described (46). The extracts were dried under vacuum and partitioned between water and chloroform at 1:1 (vol/vol). The organic phases were extensively washed with distilled water and evaporated to dryness. The lipid extracts were dissolved in chloroform and analyzed by thin-layer chromatography (TLC) on silica gel Durasil 25-precoated plates (0.25-mm thickness; Macherey-Nagel). The GPLs were resolved in chloroform-methanol at 9:1 (vol/vol) and visualized by spraying the plates with iodine.
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A construct containing a kanamycin cassette flanked by
1 kb of mmpL4a on the 5' end and
1 kb on the 3' end was made to promote homologous recombination at the mmpL4b locus. Knowledge on the M. abscessus GPL locus allows us to predict that the hybridization pattern after a SalI restriction using the upstream region of mmpL4b as a probe will give a band of
3.5 kb in the case of a wild-type gene (Fig. 1A) and a band of
1.2 kb in the case of an allelic-exchange event (Fig. 1B). In the case of homologous recombination with a single crossover, two bands would be obtained: (i) a mutant band (
1. 2 kb) plus a variable band (depending on the system) if the crossover is located upstream from the kanamycin cassette (Fig. 1C) or (ii) a wild-type band (
3. 5 kb) plus a variable band (depending on the system) if the crossover is located downstream from the kanamycin cassette (Fig. 1D). Furthermore, only the allelic exchange and single crossover upstream from the kanamycin cassette should lead to a rough colony morphology and low GPL production (5, 40). In contrast, both the wild type and the mutant resulting from a single crossover mutant downstream from the kanamycin cassette will display a smooth morphotype and produce wild-type amounts of GPL, since they both contain a wild-type copy of the mmpSL operon (Fig. 1).
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FIG. 1. Schematic representation of the wild-type mmpSL4 operon in M. abscessus and the various genetic events leading to its disruption. (A) Wild-type mmpSL4 operon; (B) allelic-exchange mutant; (C) single crossover event upstream from the kanamycin cassette; (D) single crossover event downstream from the kanamycin cassette. The predicted phenotype is indicated in parentheses. R, rough; S, smooth. X and Y indicate the variable bands of the single crossover upstream or downstream of the kanamycin cassette. The sizes of the X variable bands are 4, 4.5, and 4.1 kb for the ts-sacB, mycobacteriophage, and recombineering systems, respectively. The sizes of the Y variable bands are 1.7, 2.2, and 2.5 kb for the ts-sacB, mycobacteriophage, and recombineering systems, respectively. , 5'-truncated mmpL4a gene.
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Comparative studies of allelic-exchange mutant construction. (i) ts-sacB system.
The ts-sacB system has been widely used and is based on a thermosensitive plasmid bearing the Bacillus subtilis sacB gene (23). In this plasmid (pPR27), the presence of the sacB gene allows counterselection of clones generated by single crossover events, and counterselection efficiency is very high at nonpermissive temperature in the presence of sucrose (21-25). This system has been used with success in many mycobacterial species, notably M. smegmatis, M. tuberculosis, M. avium subsp. avium, and M. marinum.
The pPR27-
mmpL4b::Km plasmid was introduced into both M. smegmatis and M. abscessus, and transformants were selected on kanamycin and gentamicin at permissive temperatures (23, 30). One isolate of each was used to inoculate liquid medium, grown at a permissive temperature, and then serially diluted and spread onto agar plates containing kanamycin and sucrose at a nonpermissive temperature (23).
Although the counterselection efficiency for the M. smegmatis strain was high and similar to what previously reported (23), there was no reduction in the colony count in the case of M. abscessus (Table 2). All of the M. smegmatis colonies were rough, whereas all of the M. abscessus colonies displayed the wild-type smooth phenotype. Five isolates of each M. smegmatis and M. abscessus were analyzed for their GPL content by TLC and iodine staining. All five of the M. smegmatis clones were almost devoid of GPL as expected, whereas all five of the M. abscessus clones contained as much GPL as did the wild-type strain (data not shown). Genomic DNA was prepared from these five rough M. smegmatis colonies and was analyzed by Southern blotting: all had undergone an allelic-exchange event (data not shown). In the case of M. abscessus, no rough colonies were observed, a finding consistent with the absence of counterselection by sucrose and temperature; these smooth M. abscessus colonies were not investigated by Southern blotting since they could not have been subject to an allelic-exchange event. Mutations in the pPR27-
mmpL4b::Km could explain this lack of counter selection. Therefore, the plasmid was extracted from M. abscessus (from an aliquot of a culture kept at a permissive temperature) and transferred into M. smegmatis; counterselection on plates containing kanamycin and sucrose at a nonpermissive temperature was very high (10–5), thus demonstrating that the plasmid was not bearing mutations in either ori-ts or the sacB gene. We tested whether the nonfunctionality was a particularity of the type strain by testing the ts-sacB system in several other M. abscessus clinical isolates; the system was similarly unsuccessful in all of the strains tested, suggesting that the system is not functional in this species.
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TABLE 2. Comparative counterselection efficiency of the ts-sacB system in M. smegmatis mc2155 and M. abscessus CIP104536T strainsa
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(ii) Mycobacteriophage system.
This system has been developed in parallel with the ts-sacB system. It is based on a thermosensitive mycobacteriophage that is used to deliver a mutated allele (2). We tested this system because it does not rely on the counterselection by sucrose in the presence of the sacB gene and also because it is very effective in various phylogenetically diverse mycobacterial species. We produced recombinant mycobacteriophages carrying the mmpL4b mutated allele and used them to transduce both M. smegmatis and M. abscessus. Transductants were selected at nonpermissive temperature (38°C) on kanamycin plates: similar numbers of clones were obtained in both cases (Table 3). All of the kanamycin-resistant M. smegmatis transductants were rough. In contrast, most (94%) of the kanamycin-resistant M. abscessus transductants were smooth (Table 3). We further investigated only rough transductants, the only isolates that may correspond to an allelic-exchange event. Several independent transduction experiments were performed with M. abscessus to obtain a sufficient number of independent rough colonies. Twenty rough transductants of each species were analyzed by Southern blotting using the upstream region of mmpL4b as a probe. All 20 rough M. smegmatis clones (100%) had undergone an allelic-exchange event; all 20 rough M. abscessus clones (100%) had undergone homologous recombination with a single crossover upstream of the kanamycin cassette (data not shown). Although the single crossover suggests that the entire phagemid (
45 kb) is integrated, it is possible that in some cases the initial single crossover is followed by recombination and deletion events that suppress most of the phagemid DNA. Five rough clones of both M. smegmatis and M. abscessus were analyzed by TLC for their GPL content. All contained much less GPL than the parental wild-type strain, as expected (data not shown). Therefore, although it is possible to construct mutants with the desired phenotype (lack of GPL), none of the M. abscessus clones were the result of a double crossover event. The difference with M. smegmatis for which all of the clones corresponded to the double crossover event was striking. M. abscessus was less susceptible than M. smegmatis to an infection with the phage used (phAE87). Indeed,
105 times more phages were needed with M. abscessus to produce the same number of plaques as in M. smegmatis; we thought that the lower susceptibility to infection could be due to the presence of Tween 80 that could be metabolized less efficiently by M. abscessus than by M. smegmatis. Thus, the higher residual amount of this detergent would inhibit the infection by phages. We then performed transduction experiments using bacterial cells grown in the absence of Tween 80, but the results were not different from the previous experiments conducted in the presence of detergent. Tween 80 is thus not responsible of the lack of functionality of this system in M. abscessus. We next hypothesized that it might be feasible to isolate mutant mycobacteriophages that could be more infectious for M. abscessus. Phages were recovered from an infected M. abscessus culture and used to reinfect M. abscessus, but progenies were not more infectious than the parental strain. It is possible that the phage receptor is less accessible in M. abscessus, explaining the difference in phage susceptibility between the two species. It is also possible that this difference in susceptibility explains in part the inefficacy of this mutagenesis system in M. abscessus.
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TABLE 3. Comparative efficiency of the mycobacteriophage system in M. smegmatis mc2155 and M. abscessus CIP104536T strainsa
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A zeocin-resistant derivative of the replicative plasmid pJV53 was constructed and used to transform both M. smegmatis and M. abscessus. Both recombinant strains were also transformed with a cassette containing the mmpL4b mutated allele and selected on kanamycin plates. In the case of M. smegmatis, all of the kanamycin-resistant transformants were rough; by contrast, only
10% of the M. abscessus kanamycin-resistant transformants were rough clones (Table 4 and Fig. 2A). The transformation experiment was repeated several times to obtain sufficient rough M. abscessus transformants for subsequent analysis. We further analyzed 20 rough clones by Southern blotting using the upstream region of mmpL4b as a probe. We further investigated only rough transformants, the only isolates that may correspond to an allelic-exchange event. The 20 rough M. smegmatis clones (100%) had all undergone an allelic-exchange event. Nineteen of the twenty rough M. abscessus transformants (95%) had undergone a homologous recombination event involving a single crossover upstream from the kanamycin cassette; one transformant (5%) had undergone an allelic-exchange event (Fig. 2B). Therefore, as only 1 in 20 rough kanamycin-resistant transformants had undergone an allelic-exchange event, this means that only
0.5% of the kanamycin resistant transformants were allelic-exchange mutants.
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TABLE 4. Comparative efficiency of recombineering system in M. smegmatis mc2155 and M. abscessus CIP104536T strainsa
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FIG. 2. (A) Phenotypic appearance of wild-type smooth and rough M. abscessus mutant strains. (B) Southern blot analysis of the wild-type strain (lane 1), the single crossover (upstream from the kanamycin cassette) (lane 2), and the allelic-exchange mutant (lane 3) in M. abscessus using the upstream part of mmpL4b as a probe. (C) TLC analysis of the crude lipid fractions of the wild-type strain, (lane 1), a smooth kanamycin transformant (lane 2), an allelic-exchange mutant (lane 3), and the single crossover (upstream from the kanamycin cassette, lane 4) mutants of M. abscessus; TLC analyses of M. smegmatis wild type (lane 5) and mmpL4b mutant (lane 6) are also shown. TLC was performed using chloroform-methanol (9:1 [vol:vol]) as the solvent system and developed with iodine (250 µg each deposit).
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40%) corresponded to allelic exchange, and twelve (
60%) corresponded to homologous recombination with a single crossover upstream from the kanamycin cassette (Table 4). Therefore, ca. 7% of the kanamycin-resistant transformants (including both rough and smooth) were allelic-exchange mutants; this is substantially better than the 0.5% for the system with the compatible ends. Nevertheless, the system is still much less efficient than in M. smegmatis, in which the corresponding value is 100%. We tried to increase the efficiency of the system further by treating the recombinogenic substrate with an alkaline solution, since this has been shown in other model systems to increase the frequency of allelic-exchange events (16). However, in our model system, alkaline treatment did not increase the frequency of allelic-exchange events, and the ratio between rough and smooth transformants was unaffected. Nevertheless, the recombineering system was the only one of the three systems tested that, in our hands, could be successfully used to construct allelic-exchange mutants in M. abscessus. Several rough and smooth M. abscessus transformants were analyzed for their GPL content by TLC (Fig. 2C). The GPL content of the smooth transformants was indistinguishable from that in the parental wild-type strain; the rough mutants (both those corresponding to allelic exchange or to a single crossover upstream from the kanamycin cassette) contained much less GPL than the wild-type parental strain, a finding consistent with the mmpL4b mutation.
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TABLE 5. Summary of the efficiencies of the ts-sacB, mycobacteriophage, and recombineering genetic systems examined in this studya
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2 orders of magnitude less efficient than the transformation of M. smegmatis mc2155 or M. tuberculosis, but this cannot completely explain the low efficiency of the recombineering system in this species. The phage recombinases (genes gp60_61) that are overexpressed in the recipient strain are from a mycobacteriophage (Che9c) that was originally selected because it infects M. smegmatis (44). It is not known whether this phage efficiently infects M. abscessus. Possibly, these recombinogenic enzymes may be much more active in M. smegmatis than in M. abscessus, such that the frequency of double crossover events in M. abscessus is low. It may therefore be useful to isolate phages that infect M. abscessus efficiently (20), since they could be used to adapt the system to this species by overexpressing appropriate recombinases. Another possibility for improving this system would be to construct an M. abscessus ligD mutant strain: this gene promotes DNA circularization by ligation in vivo (27) and may be responsible for the high background due to single crossover events. In addition, the high frequency of spontaneous kanamycin-resistant clones obviously decreased the potency of selection. In the future, this recombineering system could be adapted to M. massiliense, another emerging opportunistic pathogen that is closely related to M. abscessus and M. chelonae (1, 37, 38, 45). Although further improvement and adaptation of this system for M. abscessus is feasible and may be desirable, we show here that it is already possible to construct defined mutants in this species. The present study thus constitutes the first step toward the development of new therapeutic and preventive strategies against this emerging pathogen.
H.M. is funded by a doctoral grant from Vaincre la Mucoviscidose. We gratefully acknowledge Vaincre la Mucoviscidose and INSERM for funding this project.
Published ahead of print on 29 December 2008. ![]()
Supplemental material for this article may be found at http://aem.asm.org/. ![]()
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