4.8 Article

Gut inflammation can boost horizontal gene transfer between pathogenic and commensal Enterobacteriaceae

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1113246109

Keywords

bacterial evolution; hospital-acquired infection; mucosal immune response; plasmid spread

Funding

  1. UBS AG (Zurich)
  2. Wellcome Trust [076964]
  3. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft DFG [SFB 479 TP A1, DO 789/4-1, STE 1971/2-1]

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The mammalian gut harbors a dense microbial community interacting in multiple ways, including horizontal gene transfer (HGT). Pangenome analyses established particularly high levels of genetic flux between Gram-negative Enterobacteriaceae. However, the mechanisms fostering intraenterobacterial HGT are incompletely understood. Using a mouse colitis model, we found that Salmonella-inflicted enteropathy elicits parallel blooms of the pathogen and of resident commensal Escherichia coli. These blooms boosted conjugative HGT of the colicin-plasmid p2 from Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium to E. coli. Transconjugation efficiencies of similar to 100% in vivo were attributable to high intrinsic p2-transfer rates. Plasmid-encoded fitness benefits contributed little. Under normal conditions, HGT was blocked by the commensal microbiota inhibiting contact-dependent conjugation between Enterobacteriaceae. Our data show that pathogen-driven inflammatory responses in the gut can generate transient enterobacterial blooms in which conjugative transfer occurs at unprecedented rates. These blooms may favor reassortment of plasmid-encoded genes between pathogens and commensals fostering the spread of fitness-, virulence-, and antibiotic-resistance determinants.

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