Chromosomal Integrons are Genetically and Functionally Isolated Units of Genomes

Author:

Blanco PaulaORCID,da Roza Filipa TrigORCID,Toribio-Celestino LauraORCID,García-Pastor LucíaORCID,Caselli NiccolòORCID,Ojeda Francisco,Darracq BaptisteORCID,Vergara EsterORCID,Millán Álvaro SanORCID,Skovgaard OleORCID,Mazel DidierORCID,Loot CélineORCID,Escudero José AntonioORCID

Abstract

ABSTRACTIntegrons are genetic elements that increase the evolvability of bacteria by capturing new genes and stockpiling them in arrays. Sedentary chromosomal integrons (SCIs), can be massive and highly stabilized structures encoding hundreds of genes, whose function remains generally unknown. SCIs have co-evolved with the host for aeons and are highly intertwined with their physiology from a mechanistic point of view. But, paradoxically, other aspects, like their variable content and location within the genome, suggest a high genetic and functional independence. In this work, we have explored the connection of SCIs to their host genome using as a model the Superintegron (SI), a 179-cassette long SCI in the genome ofVibrio choleraeN16961. We have relocated and deleted the SI using SeqDelTA, a novel method that allows to counteract the strong stabilization conferred by toxin-antitoxin systems within the array. We have characterized in depth the impact inV. cholerae’sphysiology, measuring fitness, chromosome replication dynamics, persistence, transcriptomics, phenomics and virulence. The deletion of the SI did not produce detectable effects in any condition, proving that -despite millions of years of co-evolution-, SCIs are genetically and functionally isolated units of genomes.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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