Affiliation:
1. Yersinia Research Unit, Institut Pasteur, 75724 Paris Cedex 15, France
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The horizontal transfer of genetic elements plays a major role in bacterial evolution. The high-pathogenicity island (HPI), which codes for an iron uptake system, is present and highly conserved in various
Enterobacteriaceae
, suggesting its recent acquisition by lateral gene transfer. The aim of this work was to determine whether the HPI has kept its ability to be transmitted horizontally. We demonstrate here that the HPI is indeed transferable from a donor to a recipient
Yersinia pseudotuberculosis
strain. This transfer was observable only when the donor and recipient bacteria were cocultured at low temperatures in a liquid medium. When optimized conditions were used (bacteria actively growing in an iron-deprived medium at 4°C), the frequency of HPI transfer reached ∼10
−8
. The island was transferable to various serotype I strains of
Y. pseudotuberculosis
and to
Yersinia pestis
, but not to
Y. pseudotuberculosis
strains of serotypes II and IV or to
Yersinia enterocolitica
. Upon transfer, the HPI was inserted almost systematically into the
asn3
tRNA locus. Acquisition of the HPI resulted in the loss of the resident island, suggesting an incompatibility between two copies of the HPI within the same strain. Transfer of the island did not require a functional HPI-borne insertion-excision machinery and was RecA dependent in the recipient but not the donor strain, suggesting that integration of the island into the recipient chromosome occurs via a mechanism of homologous recombination. This lateral transfer also involved the HPI-adjacent sequences, leading to the mobilization of a chromosomal region at least 46 kb in size.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
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