Molecular basis of the phenotypic variants arising from a Pseudoalteromonas lipolytica mutator

Author:

Zeng Zhenshun1ORCID,Gu Jiayu23,Lin Shituan23,Li Qian1,Wang Weiquan23,Guo Yuexue32

Affiliation:

1. Key Laboratory for Water Quality and Conservation of the Pearl River Delta, Ministry of Education, School of Environmental Science and Engineering, Guangzhou University, Guangzhou, PR China

2. University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, PR China

3. Key Laboratory of Tropical Marine Bio-Resources and Ecology, Guangdong Key Laboratory of Marine Materia Medica, RNAM Center for Marine Microbiology, South China Sea Institute of Oceanology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou, PR China

Abstract

Bacterial deficiencies in the DNA repair system can produce mutator strains that promote adaptive microevolution. However, the role of mutator strains in marine Pseudoalteromonas , capable of generating various gain-of-function genetic variants within biofilms, remains largely unknown. In this study, inactivation of mutS in Pseudoalteromonas lipolytica conferred an approximately 100-fold increased resistance to various antibiotics, including ciprofloxacin, rifampicin and aminoglycoside. Furthermore, the mutator of P. lipolytica generated variants that displayed enhanced biofilm formation but reduced swimming motility, indicating a high phenotypic diversity within the ΔmutS population. Additionally, we observed a significant production rate of approximately 50 % for the translucent variants, which play important roles in biofilm formation, when the ΔmutS strain was cultured on agar plates or under shaking conditions. Using whole-genome deep-sequencing combined with genetic manipulation, we demonstrated that point mutations in AT00_17115 within the capsular biosynthesis cluster were responsible for the generation of translucent variants in the ΔmutS subpopulation, while mutations in flagellar genes fliI and flgP led to a decrease in swimming motility. Collectively, this study reveals a specific mutator-driven evolution in P. lipolytica , characterized by substantial genetic and phenotypic diversification, thereby offering a reservoir of genetic attributes associated with microbial fitness.

Funder

Guangzhou Municipal Science and Technology Project

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Microbiology Society

Subject

General Medicine

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