Type IV-A3 CRISPR-Cas systems drive inter-plasmid conflicts by acquiring spacersin trans

Author:

Benz FabienneORCID,Camara-Wilpert Sarah,Russel Jakob,Wandera Katharina G.,Čepaitė Rimvydė,Ares-Arroyo Manuel,Gomes-Filho José Vicente,Englert Frank,Kuehn Johannes,Gloor Silvana,Cuénod Aline,Aguilà-Sans Mònica,Maccario Lorrie,Egli Adrian,Randau Lennart,Pausch Patrick,Rocha Eduardo,Beisel Chase L.,Madsen Jonas S.,Bikard David,Hall Alex R.,Sørensen Søren J,Pinilla-Redondo RafaelORCID

Abstract

ABSTRACTType IV-A CRISPR-Cas systems are primarily encoded on plasmids and form multi-subunit ribonucleoprotein complexes with unknown biological functions. In contrast to other CRISPR-Cas types, they lack the archetypical CRISPR acquisition module and encode a DinG helicase instead of a nuclease component. Type IV-A3 systems are carried by large conjugative plasmids that often harbor multiple antibiotic-resistance genes. Although their CRISPR array contents suggest a role in inter-plasmid conflicts, this function and the underlying mechanisms have remained unexplored. Here, we demonstrate that a plasmid-encoded type IV-A3 CRISPR-Cas system co-opts the type I-E adaptation machinery from its clinicalKlebsiella pneumoniaehost to update its CRISPR array. Furthermore, we demonstrate that robust interference of conjugative plasmids and phages is elicited through CRISPR RNA-dependent transcriptional repression. By targeting plasmid core functions, type IV-A3 can prevent the uptake of incoming plasmids, limit their horizontal transfer, and destabilize co-residing plasmids, altogether supporting type IV-A3’s involvement in plasmid competition. Collectively, our findings shed light on the molecular mechanisms and ecological function of type IV-A3 systems and have broad implications for understanding and countering the spread of antibiotic resistance in clinically relevant strains.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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