Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois 61801
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Results of a recent study of antibiotic resistance genes in human colonic
Bacteroides
strains suggested that gene transfer events between members of this genus are fairly common. The identification of
Bacteroides
isolates that carried an erythromycin resistance gene,
ermG
, whose DNA sequence was 99% identical to that of an
ermG
gene found previously only in gram-positive bacteria raised the further possibility that conjugal elements were moving into
Bacteroides
species from other genera. Six of seven
ermG-
containing
Bacteroides
strains tested were able to transfer
ermG
by conjugation. One of these strains was chosen for further investigation. Results of pulsed-field gel electrophoresis experiments showed that the conjugal element carrying
ermG
in this strain is an integrated element about 75 kb in size. Thus, the element appears to be a conjugative transposon (CTn) and was designated CTnGERM1. CTnGERM1 proved to be unrelated to the predominant type of CTn found in
Bacteroides
isolates—CTns of the CTnERL/CTnDOT family—which sometimes carry another type of
erm
gene,
ermF
. A 19-kbp segment of DNA from CTnGERM1 was cloned and sequenced. A 10-kbp portion of this segment hybridized not only to DNA from all the
ermG
-containing strains but also to DNA from strains that did not carry
ermG
. Thus, CTnGERM1 seems to be part of a family of CTns, some of which have acquired
ermG
. The percentage of G+C content of the
ermG
region was significantly lower than that of the chromosome of
Bacteroides
species—an indication that CTnGERM1 may have entered
Bacteroides
strains from some other bacterial genus. A survey of strains isolated before 1970 and after 1990 suggests that the CTnGERM1 type of CTn entered
Bacteroides
species relatively recently. One of the genes located upstream of e
rmG
encoded a protein that had 85% amino acid sequence identity with a macrolide efflux pump, MefA, from
Streptococcus pyogenes
. Our having found >90% sequence identity of two upstream genes, including
mefA
, and the remnants of two transposon-carried genes downstream of
ermG
with genes found previously only in gram-positive bacteria raises the possibility that gram-positive bacteria could have been the origin of CTnGERM1.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
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