4.3 Article

A culture-independent method for studying transfer of IncI1 plasmids from wild-type Escherichia coli in complex microbial communities

Journal

JOURNAL OF MICROBIOLOGICAL METHODS
Volume 152, Issue -, Pages 18-26

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.mimet.2018.07.009

Keywords

Horizontal gene transfer; Antimicrobial resistance; Enterobacteriaceae; ESBL; bla(CTX-M-1); bla(CMY-2)

Funding

  1. University of Copenhagen Research Center for Control of Antibiotic Resistance (UC-Care)
  2. Center for Research in Pig Production and Health (CPH Pig)

Ask authors/readers for more resources

IncI1 plasmids play a central role in the transfer of antimicrobial resistance genes among Enterobacteriaceae in animals and humans. Knowledge on the dynamics of Inch plasmid transfer is limited, mainly due to lack of culture-independent methods that can quantify donor strain survival and plasmid transfer in complex microbial communities. The aim of this study was to develop a culture-independent method to study the dynamics of Inch plasmids transfer by fluorescence-activated cell sorting. We genetically modified three wild-type Escherichia coli of animal (n = 2) and human (n = 1) origin carrying bla(CMY-2) or bla(CTX-M-1) on two epidemic IncI1. plasmids (pST12 and pST7). Non-coding regions on the chromosome and on the IncI1 plasmid of each strain were tagged with mCherry (red) and GFPmut3 (green) fluorescent proteins, respectively, using lambda recombineering. A gene cassette expressing mCherry and lacl(q) was inserted into the chromosome, whereas the plasmid was marked with a GFPmut3 cassette with Lacl(q) repressible promoter. Therefore, gfpmut3 was repressed in donor strains but expressed in recipient strains acquiring the plasmids. We demonstrated that genetic engineering of the strains did not affect the growth rate and plasmid transfer-ability in filter and broth matings. A proof-of-concept experiment using the CoMiniGut, an in vitro model of the colon, proved the validity of our method for studying the survival of wild-type E. coli and horizontal transfer of IncI1 plasmids under different pH and oxygen conditions. The dual-labeling method by fluorescent proteins is useful to determine persistence of exogenous E. coli and transfer dynamics of IncI1 plasmids in microbial communities.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.3
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available