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Journal of Bacteriology, September 1998, p. 4350-4359, Vol. 180, No. 17
0021-9193/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Complete Nucleotide Sequence of pSK41: Evolution of
Staphylococcal Conjugative Multiresistance Plasmids
Tracey
Berg,
Neville
Firth,
Sumalee
Apisiridej,
Anusha
Hettiaratchi,
Amornrut
Leelaporn,
and
Ronald A.
Skurray*
School of Biological Sciences, University of
Sydney, New South Wales 2006, Australia
Received 5 May 1998/Accepted 16 June 1998
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ABSTRACT |
The 46.4-kb nucleotide sequence of pSK41, a prototypical
multiresistance plasmid from Staphylococcus aureus, has
been determined, representing the first completely sequenced
conjugative plasmid from a gram-positive organism. Analysis of the
sequence has enabled the identification of the probable replication,
maintenance, and transfer functions of the plasmid and has provided
insights into the evolution of a clinically significant group of
plasmids. The basis of deletions commonly associated with pSK41 family
plasmids has been investigated, as has the observed insertion site
specificity of Tn552-like
-lactamase transposons within
them. Several of the resistance determinants carried by pSK41-like
plasmids were found to be located on up to four smaller cointegrated
plasmids. pSK41 and related plasmids appear to represent a
consolidation of antimicrobial resistance functions, collected by a
preexisting conjugative plasmid via transposon insertion and
IS257-mediated cointegrative capture of other plasmids.
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INTRODUCTION |
Staphylococcus aureus
and, increasingly, coagulase-negative staphylococci are significant
nosocomial pathogens, largely as a consequence of their propensity to
develop antimicrobial resistance (37). Resistance
determinants can be chromosomally encoded and/or carried by one or more
plasmids commonly harbored by clinical staphylococcal strains. Several
plasmid types have been identified in staphylococci (36,
37). The rolling-circle (RC) replicating plasmids are generally
less than 5 kb in size and are cryptic or encode only a single
resistance determinant (20). The staphylococcal RC plasmids
have been subdivided into four families, exemplified by pT181, pC194,
pSN2, and pE194, based on replication region sequence similarity. In
contrast, the pSK639 family of trimethoprim resistance plasmids are
thought to replicate via the theta mode (1). The pSK639-like
plasmids, 8 to 13 kb in size, found to date contain two or three copies
of IS257 (23). Because of their large size,
(i.e., 15 to 40 kb) staphylococcal multiresistance plasmids are also
presumed to replicate by a theta mechanism (18); the
-lactamase-heavy-metal resistance (46) and pSK1
(28) families are the most thoroughly characterized groups
of such plasmids. The determinants carried by multiresistance plasmids are often located on one or more transposon-like structures and/or associated with insertion sequence (IS) elements.
The largest of the staphylococcal plasmids identified are the
conjugative multiresistance plasmids. One structurally related group of
these, typified by pSK41, pGO1, and pJE1 (see Fig. 1 below) (9,
11, 53), are capable of mediating their own conjugative transfer
and the mobilization of coresident plasmids (1, 40). These
plasmids, now designated the pSK41 family (37), were first
detected in strains isolated in the mid 1970s and have subsequently
been identified in geographically diverse isolates in both S. aureus and coagulase-negative staphylococci (2, 9, 19,
30).
pSK41 family plasmids typically confer resistance to the
aminoglycosides, gentamicin, tobramycin, and kanamycin (Gmr
Tmr Kmr), via an aacA-aphD gene
located on a Tn4001-IS257 hybrid structure (3) and neomycin (Nmr) via an aadD
determinant encoded by a cointegrated copy of the small RC plasmid
pUB110 (4), as well as multidrug resistance to antiseptics
and disinfectants encoded by smr (formerly qacD) (25). pGO1 and pJE1 additionally confer
dfrA-encoded trimethoprim resistance (Tpr), and
other family members encode resistance to mupirocin or contain a
Tn552-like
-lactamase transposon (15, 21, 34). Plasmids of the pSK41 family contain multiple copies of the insertion element IS257, flanking several of the resistance
determinants and a transfer-associated region, tra
(37). We have completed the nucleotide sequence of pSK41 to
identify additional functions encoded by plasmids of this type and to
gain insights into their evolution.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Bacterial strains, plasmids, and growth conditions.
Escherichia coli DH5
(F
endA hsdR17
supE44 thi-1 
recA1 gyrA96 relA1
80dlacZ
M15; Bethesda Research Laboratories) was
used as the host for all E. coli plasmids. S. aureus SK982 (resistant to rifampin and novobiocin)
(27) and SK983 (resistant to streptomycin and fusidic acid)
(51) were used as hosts of S. aureus plasmids. General culture conditions were 37°C on Luria agar (LA) plates or in
Luria broth (LB). Plasmids used as sequencing templates were
constructed by ligation of pSK41 and pJE1 restriction fragments into
pUC (54) and pBluescript (Stratagene) series vectors; other plasmids used in this study are shown in Table
1. Where appropriate, antimicrobial
agents were used at the following concentrations: ampicillin, 100 µg/ml; ethidium bromide, 40 µg/ml; fusidic acid, 10 µg/ml;
gentamicin, 20 µg/ml; neomycin, 15 µg/ml; novobiocin, 2 µg/ml;
rifampin, 20 µg/ml; and streptomycin, 100 µg/ml.
DNA manipulation.
Plasmid DNA was isolated from E. coli by using either the alkaline lysis method (45) or
the Quantum Prep plasmid Miniprep Kit (Bio-Rad) and from S. aureus as described by Lyon et al. (26). Restriction
endonucleases and T4 DNA ligase were used in accordance with the
manufacturers' instructions. DNA cloning was performed by standard
techniques (45). PCR was carried out with Pfu DNA polymerase (Stratagene) or the Expand High-Fidelity PCR System (Boehringer Mannheim) according to the manufacturers' recommendations. Primers for PCR and nucleotide sequencing were made with a Beckman Oligo-1000 synthesizer. PCR products to be sequenced were subjected to
ammonium acetate precipitation and concentrated with a Microcon 100 microconcentrator (Amicon).
Nucleotide sequence determination and data analysis.
Nucleotide sequencing was performed with the SequiTherm cycle
sequencing kit (Epicentre Technologies) according to the
manufacturer's instructions or by the Sydney University and Prince
Alfred Macromolecular Analysis Centre with the ABI Ready Reaction kit.
Double-stranded plasmids and PCR products amplified directly from pSK41
were utilized as sequencing templates; sequences from PCR products were
derived from at least two independent amplifications. All restriction sites were crossed, and all novel sequences were determined on both DNA
strands. Sequences were stored and assembled with the program
SEQUENCHER (Gene Codes Corp.) and analyzed with the GCG package
(8) maintained by the Australian National Genomic
Information Service, University of Sydney. Sequence similarities were
assessed by using pairwise alignments generated with the program GAP
(8) with the Dayhoff 250 PAM matrix (7).
Statistical significance (Z) was calculated as follows: Z = (a
m)/s, where a is the
alignment score; m is the mean of 100 alignment scores where
one of the sequences has been randomly shuffled; and s is
the standard deviation of m (39). Z scores
greater than 3, 6, or 10 were taken to be indicative of a
"possible," "probable," or "highly probable" evolutionary relatedness, respectively (24). Phylogenetic analyses were
performed by using programs in the PHYLIP package (10). Dot
plots were generated with the program DOTTY PLOTTER (14).
Potential transmembrane segments were identified with the program
TOPPRED II (5).
Detection and characterization of deletion mutants.
Conjugative matings were performed with the plasmid pSK41 between
S. aureus strains SK982 and SK983. Overnight cultures of donor and recipient strains grown in LB were diluted 1:10 in fresh medium and grown to an optical density at 600 nm (OD600) of
0.6. Portions (0.5 ml each) of donor and recipient cells were combined in 2 ml of LB and filtered through a 2.5-cm (0.45-µm pore size) Millipore filter. The filter was placed bacterium-side-up on LA and
incubated upright overnight. Cells were removed from the filter by
vortexing in 2 ml of LB, and transconjugants were selected on medium
containing gentamicin, neomycin, or ethidium bromide, in addition to
selection for the recipient strain, and then screened against the
nonselected agents to reveal any loss of resistance. DNA was isolated
from sensitive transconjugants, and PCR was used to confirm the loss of
a resistance gene. Southern blot analysis of plasmid digests was
performed to indicate the extent of a deletion. AccI-digested plasmids run on a 1% (wt/vol) agarose gel
were transferred to Hybond N+ membranes as described
elsewhere (45). The ECL direct nucleic acid labeling and
detection system (Amersham) was used to label an IS257 probe
(nucleotides [nt] 194 to 719; see Fig. 6) and to detect hybridizing
fragments, according to the manufacturer's directions.
IS257 elements at the deletion junctions were sequenced with
PCR products that entirely spanned the elements.
Nucleotide sequence accession number.
The complete
nucleotide sequence of pSK41 is available under the GenBank accession
number AF051917. The nucleotide sequence of the additional segment in
pJE1 is available under the GenBank accession number AF051916.
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RESULTS AND DISCUSSION |
The physical and genetic maps of pSK41 and related plasmids are
shown in Fig. 1. The 46,445-nt sequence
of pSK41 was found to have an overall A+T content of 70.3%, which is
consistent with a prolonged existence in low G+C content hosts, such as
staphylococci. A total of 42 open reading frames (ORFs) likely to
represent functional translated genes are evident in the sequence, and
a further three truncated remnants of genes can also be
identified; the genetic organization of the entire plasmid is
illustrated in Fig. 2. The DNA
segments flanked by IS25741G and
IS25741A and by IS25741C
and IS25741D (Fig. 1 and 2) probably
represent the basic backbone of the plasmid into which other molecules
have been inserted (see below). The latter of these corresponds to the
previously reported tra region (11) and will
therefore not be described in detail here. Characteristics of the
deduced products of the 14 genes identified in the 14.2-kb segment
between IS25741G and
IS25741A are summarized in Table
2.

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FIG. 1.
Maps of the staphylococcal conjugative plasmids, pSK41,
pJE1, pGO1, and pUW3626 (3, 9, 11, 34); plasmid sizes are
shown on the right. The genetic loci shown are aacA-aphD
(Gmr Tmr Kmr), aadD
(Nmr), ble (bleomycin resistance),
dfrA (trimethoprim resistance), smr (antiseptic
and disinfectant resistance), blaZ (penicillin resistance),
tra/trs (conjugative transfer functions), and
oriT (origin of conjugative transfer). The positions and
extents of the cointegrated copy of the plasmid pUB110 (4),
the Tn4001-IS257 hybrid structure (3),
and the Tn552-like transposon (15) are indicated.
Truncated copies of IS256 are represented by open boxes,
whereas IS257 elements are represented as solid boxes
containing an arrowhead indicating the direction of transposase
transcription and hence the element's orientation. IS257
element designations, following the nomenclature of Leelaporn et al.
(23), are shown for pSK41 and pJE1, whereas designations for
pGO1 are taken from Morton et al. (34). Where known, the 8 nt of sequence adjacent to each IS257 element is indicated;
flanking sequences on pGO1 are from Morton et al. (33, 34).
EcoRI restriction sites (E) are shown.
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FIG. 2.
Genetic organization of pSK41. Genes are represented by
open boxes with names shown within or below and with arrowheads
indicating the direction of transcription; smaller open boxes represent
interrupted genes. Copies of IS257 are denoted by black
boxes containing the element's designation (A through G), whereas
inverted copies of truncated IS256 elements are indicated by
open triangles. Hatched segments indicate integrated small plasmids. RC
plasmid replication-initiation genes are suffixed (RC) to differentiate
them from the probable theta-mode rep gene of pSK41.
Kilobase coordinates are shown below, as are the positions of
EcoRI restriction sites (E) and oriT (vertical
arrow). The position in pSK41 corresponding to the insertion site of
the Tn552-like transposon in pUW3626 is indicated by an
asterisk (*). The position and genetic organization of the additional
DNA segment present in pJE1 is also indicated; the tnp genes
of the IS257 elements have been omitted for clarity. The
pSK639-like rep gene remnant is suffixed (639) to
differentiate it from pSK41 rep. Genetic nomenclature is as
described for Fig. 1 and as follows: numbers, size in codons of deduced
ORF of unknown function; res, resolvase; oriT,
origin of conjugative transfer; nes, oriT
nickase; rep/repU, replication initiation; tnp,
transposase; pre, recombinase; artA/traA-M,
transfer-associated genes; thyE, thymidilate synthetase.
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Plasmid replication and maintenance functions.
The segment of
pSK41 between IS25741G and
IS25741A was presumed to encode the plasmid's
replication functions since it is the only region conserved in all
members of the plasmid family. Consistent with this notion,
the gene immediately adjacent to IS25741A,
now designated rep (Fig. 2), encodes a deduced
product, Rep, which shares statistically significant sequence
similarity to the replication-initiation proteins from several plasmids
of gram-positive origin: viz., the staphylococcal plasmid pSX267
(Z = 48.5) (13); the enterococcal plasmids pAD1 (Z = 30.9) (56), pCF10 (Z = 31.9) (44), and
pPD1 (Z = 37.5) (12); and the Lactobacillus
plasmids pLJ1 (Z = 22.2) (50) and pSAK1 (Z = 35.1)
(GenBank entry Z50862). The pSK41 rep product is most
similar to the RepA protein of the arsenate resistance plasmid, pSX267,
from Staphylococcus xylosus (Fig.
3A) (13), a
member of the
-lactamase-heavy-metal resistance family of plasmids
(17). This finding establishes an evolutionary link
between the replication functions of two clinically significant groups of staphylococcal plasmids: viz., the pSK41 family of
conjugative plasmids and the
-lactamase-heavy-metal resistance
plasmids that emerged approximately three decades earlier
(28).

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FIG. 3.
(A) Phylogenetic analysis of the deduced pSK41
rep product and related proteins. The amino acid sequences
were obtained from the following GenBank entries: pSX267, X92404;
pCF10, L14285; pPD1, D78016; pAD1, L01794; pLJ1, J04240; pSAK1, Z50862;
and IREBF-1, M55290. The unrooted tree was constructed by using the
programs PROTDIST and NEIGHBOR (10) from a multiple
alignment generated by PILEUP (8). An equivalent tree was
obtained with the program PROTPARS (10). (B) Nucleotide
sequence alignment of the replication regions of pSK41 and pSX267
(13); identities are indicated by vertical lines and indels
are denoted by dots. The nucleotide sequences are numbered on the
right. Ribosome binding sites for the rep genes are
underlined, and the deduced amino acid sequences are shown above and
below the nucleotide sequences, respectively. Directly repeated
sequences are indicated by arrowed lines, whereas inverted repeats are
shown by half-arrowed lines. Amino acids conserved in all proteins
shown in panel A are boxed.
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Sequence similarity extends to the nucleotide level between the pSK41
and pSX267 rep genes, but is primarily confined to the 5'
ends of the coding sequences (Fig. 3B). The lack of sequence similarity beyond the extremities of the rep coding
sequences is consistent with the finding that the origin of pSX267
replication appears to be located within the repA ORF,
possibly associated with direct repeats present in the gene
(13). Our analysis has revealed analogously located, albeit
distinct, arrays of direct and inverted repeats in the sequences of
both plasmids (Fig. 3B).
Like its homologous plasmid replication-initiation proteins, pSK41 Rep
shares similarity with a protein identified as mouse interferon
response element binding factor 1 (IREBF-1; Z = 37.1) (13,
56, 58). However, phylogenetic analysis (Fig. 3A) suggests that
IREBF-1 may actually represent a contaminant of bacterial origin
present in the mouse cDNA library from which this gene was obtained,
since IREBF-1 is more similar to some of the plasmid rep
products (e.g., pSK41) than some of the members of this plasmid replication-initiation protein family are to each other (e.g., pSK41
and pAD1); the high A+T content of the IREBF-1 nucleotide sequence
(64%) supports this contention.
The deduced product of pSK41 orf86 contains a predicted
helix-turn-helix domain, suggesting that it might be a DNA-binding protein. The location of this divergently transcribed gene immediately upstream of pSK41 rep (Fig. 2) raises the possibility that
orf86 may be involved in the regulation of plasmid
replication.
The pSK41 res gene was found to encode a predicted product
sharing similarity to a superfamily of recombinases which includes plasmid resolvases. The regions of greatest similarity correspond to
motifs diagnostic of the recombinase superfamily and, like the other
members of this family, pSK41 Res is predicted to possess a
helix-turn-helix DNA-binding domain. Such enzymes are thought to
contribute to the segregational stability of plasmids by
facilitating efficient partitioning through the conversion
of plasmid multimers into monomers (49).
A resolvase-encoding gene, sin, has previously been detected
on the staphylococcal plasmids pSK1 and pI9789, from the pSK1 and
-lactamase-heavy-metal resistance plasmid families, respectively, and Southern hybridization studies indicated that such genes were common on plasmids from these groups (38). However, the
deduced pSK41 res product was found to be no more closely
related to those of the sin genes than it is to resolvases
from other genera (data not shown); indeed, the lack of nucleotide
sequence similarity explains the previous failure of a pSK1
sin probe to hybridize to pSK41 (38). The related
-lactamase transposons, Tn552 (43) and
Tn4002 (16), have been found to insert
preferentially into both
-lactamase-heavy-metal resistance and pSK1
family plasmids at a site within an inverted repeat located immediately
upstream of their respective sin genes (38).
Site-specific insertion of Tn552-like
-lactamase
transposons also appears to have occurred in pSK41-like conjugative
plasmids (15, 57). Correlation of the pSK41 nucleotide
sequence to restriction maps of the
-lactamase-encoding relatives
pUW3626 (Fig. 1) and pCRG1600 (28) indicated that the
Tn552-like transposons in these plasmids are likely to be located in the vicinity of genes equivalent to pSK41 res. To
investigate this precisely, the junctions of the transposon in pUW3626
were amplified with primers corresponding to the ends of
Tn552 and the pSK41 orf149 and res
genes.
Sequence analysis revealed the transposon in pUW3626 to be flanked by a
6-nt target duplication, ATAGCG, corresponding to nt 2594 to
2599 of the pSK41 sequence; a duplication of this size was previously
found flanking Tn552 in the
-lactamase-heavy-metal resistance plasmid, pS1 parent
(pI9789::Tn552), whereas a 7-nt duplication
was associated with Tn4002 in the pSK1 family plasmid pSK4
(38). The
-lactamase transposon in pUW3626 is located 185 nt upstream of this plasmid's res allele; Tn552
and Tn4002 were found only 31 nt upstream of
sin on pS1 parent and pSK4 (38). Furthermore,
no obvious sequence similarity is discernible between the
insertion sites in pUW3626 and pS1 parent or pSK4, and, in contrast to
the large inverted repeat interrupted by the insertion of
Tn552 and Tn4002 upstream of sin, only
small repeats can be identified in the vicinity on pUW3626. However,
the insertion sites are all located adjacent to canonical promoter-like
sequences which may be responsible for the transcription of
res and sin on their respective plasmids
(38) (data not shown). The preference of
Tn552-like transposons for insertion sites upstream of these resolvase genes is intriguing given the absence of nucleotide sequence
similarity between them. It is conceivable that the insertion sites
discussed here coincide with the target sites of the plasmids' cognate
resolvases and that it is a particular DNA-Res protein conformation
that is being recognized by the Tn552-like transposons rather than a specific sequence per se.
Conjugative transfer functions.
The pSK41 DNA segment from nt
7982 to 10325 was found to be virtually identical to the equivalent
region from the related plasmid pGO1. This segment of pGO1 encodes the
origin of conjugative transfer, oriT, and the gene encoding
the enzyme responsible for nicking at this site, nes
(6). The nucleotide differences that are evident are
confined to two small regions. The first of these corresponds to four
"indels" (insertions-deletions), two in each plasmid, within a
24-nt segment in the central portion of nes, which results
in a unique 8-amino-acid contiguous sequence within each product. The
second region of divergence occurs downstream of nes and
consists of a 22-nt stretch containing 5 indels (all nucleotides absent
from the pSK41 sequence) and 2 nucleotide differences, which would be
expected to result in a different and lengthened C terminus in the
protein encoded by the pGO1 allele of pSK41 orf575.
Comparison of the pSK41-encoded conjugation-associated proteins to the
sequence databases has revealed a relationship between this
staphylococcal transfer system and that of the broad-host-range plasmid
pIP501, which was originally identified in Streptococcus agalactiae but has also been shown to replicate in
Staphylococcus, Clostridium,
Pediococcus, and Listeria species
(29). In addition to the previously described
similarity between oriT nickases (6), amino acid similarity is evident between other proteins encoded by the
pIP501 conjugation region A (55) and the pSK41
tra region (11). This conservation extends to the
genetic organization of these regions (Fig.
4). The identification of any
relationship between the remainder of the pSK41 tra genes
and other pIP501 sequences, in particular a second segment associated
with conjugative transfer, region B (29), awaits further
characterization of the latter.

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FIG. 4.
Relatedness of pSK41 and pIP501 conjugation systems. The
genetic organization of the pIP501 conjugation region A (55)
and pSK41 nes/oriT and artA-traG of the
tra region (11) is illustrated. Genes (arrowed
boxes) encoding homologous products are linked by shading; percent
amino acid sequence identities and Z scores (in parentheses) are shown.
The positions and strands of the oriT nick site of each
plasmid are indicated by vertical arrows. A segment of approximately 11 kb between the two regions of pSK41 has been omitted for clarity.
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Studies of pGO1 have indicated that the minimal conjugative unit of
this class of plasmid consists of the oriT/nes and
tra regions (6). However, analysis of transposon
mutagenesis studies of the closely related plasmid, pJE1
(9), indicates that other functions encoded by the DNA
segment between IS257JE1H and
IS257JE1A (Fig. 1) might also play a role in
conjugative processes. Sequence analysis of the equivalent region
of pSK41, between IS25741G and
IS25741A, lends credence to this possibility.
The deduced product of pSK41 orf575 shares statistically
significant sequence similarity (Z = 14.3) with that of
ltrC from the lactococcal conjugative plasmid pRS01
(32). Like orf575 and nes,
ltrC is located in proximity to a nickase gene, in this case
ltrB. A transposon insertion in ltrC was found to
slightly reduce conjugative transfer efficiency (32). It
seems likely that ltrC might possess additional 5' sequences since alignments reveal that similarity begins at
approximately amino acid 200 of Orf575 at residues preceding the
proposed N-terminal methionine residue of LtrC (data not shown);
although a potential initiation codon has been identified for
ltrC, the absence of a in-frame termination codon
in the available upstream sequence is consistent with this proposal.
A 7-nt sequence, CATGACA, was found to overlap the
35
sequence of the three potential transcriptional promoters
identified in the pSK41 tra region (11). Sharma
et al. (47) have shown that for pGO1 the
transcriptional repressor TrsN (equivalent to pSK41 ArtA) binds
to sites overlapping this sequence in each of these promoters.
Analysis of the DNA segment between IS25741G and
IS25741A revealed three additional potential
promoters with
35 boxes overlapped by CATGACA
sequences. Two overlapping copies of this motif, one with a
single mismatch, are found in a putative orf259 promoter; four overlapping copies, each with a single mismatch, are evident in the putative orf538 promoter; and two
overlapping copies are associated with the promoter probably
responsible for transcription of both orf346 and
orf109. Although the significance of these sequences remains
to be determined, their presence hints either that the genes
transcribed by these promoters may play a role in conjugation or that
they are at least coordinately regulated with transfer-associated
functions.
IS257 and small plasmid cointegrates.
Restriction
map similarity and limited nucleotide sequence data suggested
that pSK41 contains a cointegrated copy of the small aminoglycoside and bleomycin resistance RC plasmid pUB110, which is
flanked by IS25741B and
IS25741C (Fig. 1 and 2) (4); the
complete sequence data described here demonstrated identity between
this segment of pSK41 and the published sequence of pUB110
(31). Analysis of the pSK41 sequence has revealed that two
other segments, bounded by IS25741A and
IS25741B and by IS25741D
and IS25741E, also correspond to cointegrated
copies of pC194 family RC plasmids (Fig. 2). The first of these
segments, which is 2682 nt long, was found to be most similar to the
Staphylococcus epidermidis plasmid pSK108 (22);
their relationship is illustrated in a dot plot comparison (Fig.
5A). The extent of sequence similarity includes the remnants of a replication-initiation gene,
rep'(RC) and 'rep(RC), at each end of the
segment, a plus-strand-replication-origin nick site, and an
SSOA (formerly palA) minus strand origin.
Similarity breaks down at a region equivalent to that in pSK108 which
encodes the smr multidrug resistance gene (Fig. 5A). In
pSK41, this segment contains a gene encoding a deduced product of 248 amino acids which hydropathy analysis indicates is likely to be a
membrane protein possessing up to eight transmembrane segments.
Although no similar proteins were found in the sequence databases, it
is tempting to speculate that this protein may be a transporter of unknown specificity. It would seem that in a stage of the process leading to cointegration of this plasmid, the replication gene, rep(RC), has been bisected by IS257 insertion
(Fig. 5A). Duplications of 8 nt expected to result from
IS257 transposition (35) are not found at the
termini of the segment (Fig. 1). Flanking deletions, a previously
described property of IS257 (21), may account for the absence of such repeats since comparison of the rep
remnants with the homolog from pSK108 suggests that approximately 57 nt (encoding 19 amino acids) has been deleted from this pSK41 segment.

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FIG. 5.
Dot plot comparisons between segments of pSK41
(x axes) and the small RC plasmids (y axes),
pSK108 (A) and pSK89 (B). Dots indicate 20-nt stretches containing at
least 17 identities. The genetic organization of the plasmids is
illustrated beside the relevant axes. The extents and directions of
genes are indicated by arrowed boxes; homologous genes are indicated by
equivalent shading. The locations of the SSOA sequences are
denoted by open boxes, and the positions of the putative replication
nick sites are indicated by an arrow. The locations of the flanking
IS257 elements in pSK41 are also shown. The segment of
pSK108 orf334 not represented in the comparable pSK41
sequence is indicated by hatching. Sequence numbering for pSK89 and
pSK108 starts at the first nucleotide their replication-initiation
genes, rep and orf334, respectively. The pSK108
(22) and pSK89 (25) sequences are from the
GenBank entries U15783 and M37889, respectively.
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The nucleotide sequence of the smr gene of pSK41 has been
reported previously (25), the sequence published
representing one end of a segment flanked by
IS25741D and IS25741E
(Fig. 1 and 2). Analysis of this segment in its entirety revealed extensive similarity to another S. aureus plasmid of
the pC194 family, pSK89 (Fig. 5B) (25). In addition to the
previously described homologous smr multidrug resistance
gene and SSOA sequences (25), this segment
contains a homologous replication-initiation gene,
rep(RC). No sequence resembling the replication nick site of
pC194 family plasmids is evident in the sequence. Extrapolation based
on its position in closely related plasmids indicates that the nick
site would be expected to reside somewhere beyond the flanking
IS257 elements. It is therefore likely that the nick site
has been removed as a result of an IS257-mediated adjacent deletion, which would also explain the absence of flanking target duplications.
In pJE1, two additional IS257-flanked DNA segments are
located between the integrated copy of pUB110 and the tra
region (Fig. 1 and 2). The segment between
IS257JE1D and IS257JE1E
contains the trimethoprim resistance determinant, dfrA, and
is virtually identical in sequence to an equivalent segment of the composite transposon-like element Tn4003 from pSK1
(42), except for a deletion flanking the IS257
copy upstream of dfrA (21). Tn4003 is
now thought to be derived from a cointegrated copy of a pSK639 family
trimethoprim resistance plasmid (1, 48). Consistent with the
notion that this region of pJE1 is similarly derived, sequencing
revealed that the segment between IS257JE1C and
IS257JE1D (Fig. 2) is identical to a portion of
pSK639. An equivalent segment was also found in Tn4003
(1), although the pSK639 rep gene remnant in pJE1
is 427 nt larger than that present in Tn4003 on pSK1. The
incorporation of a pSK639-like plasmid into a pJE1 precursor appears to
have occurred as the result of homologous recombination between an
IS257 copy equivalent to IS25741C and
an element equivalent to IS257639A (1,
23) rather than via IS257 transposition, since an
additional element does not seem to have been generated. The identities
of IS25741C, IS257639A,
IS257JE1C, and IS257JE1E
are consistent with this model (Fig. 6).

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|
FIG. 6.
Comparison of IS257 elements from pSK41,
pJE1, and pSK639. Element designations are given on the left, whereas
sequence numbering is shown on the right. The pSK639 sequences are
taken from GenBank entry U40259. Dots indicate identity to the top
sequence, whereas dashes indicate the positions of indels. The terminal
inverted repeats of IS257 are indicated by arrowed lines.
The position of the proposed crossover sites in
IS2575093B and IS2575094E
can be localized to the regions between the brackets in these
sequences.
|
|
Sequences corresponding to a pSK639-type rep gene are also
present on pGO1, adjacent to IS257GO1R
(34) within an IS257-flanked segment similarly
neighboring that encoding dfrA (Fig. 1). The organization
and restriction map of this region, with an additional three copies of
IS257 in comparison to pSK41, suggests that cointegration of
a pSK639-like plasmid has resulted from nonresolved replicative
transposition of the element on the pGO1 precursor equivalent to
IS25741G; IS257GO1R
differs from IS25741G by a single nucleotide (C
at position 107; Fig. 6). It should also be noted that for each of the
small cointegrated plasmids described above, which include both RC and
probable theta-mode replicons, the cognate replication function appears
to have been inactivated either by interruption of the rep
gene coding sequence by IS257 insertion or by the removal of
essential sequences by IS257-flanking deletions.
The region of pSK41 from IS25741E to
IS25741G (Fig. 1 and 2) is a
Tn4001-IS257 hybrid structure essentially
identical to that described previously for another pSK41-like plasmid,
pSH6 (3), differing at only a single nucleotide within
IS25741E. This structure represents a derivative
of Tn4001 that has been immobilized by IS257
insertions and/or flanking deletions into its bounding IS256
elements. The DNA segment between IS25741F and
IS25741G shares statistically significant
similarity (data not shown) with a region of the Staphylococcus
hominis chromosome distal to a gene of unknown function,
smpB (41); the evolutionary implications of this
relationship are not clear at this time.
Comparative analysis of the IS257 elements of pSK41 (Fig. 6)
revealed that they can be grouped into several sequence types. IS25741A and IS25741B are
identical and differ from IS25741C at only four
positions. These elements are also very similar or identical to the two
elements on pSK639, as are IS257JE1C,
IS257JE1D, and IS257JE1E,
a finding consistent with the notion that this portion of pJE1 is
derived from such a plasmid. With the exception of two nucleotides, IS25741D and
IS25741E are identical but differ from
IS25741ABC-type at a minimum of 22 positions. Oriented in opposition to all other IS257 copies
in pSK41 (Fig. 1 and 2), IS25741F differs
markedly from the two aforementioned sequence types. IS25741G appears to be the product of multiple
recombination events, since it possesses
IS25741ABC-type ends and an
IS25741F-like central portion. It can be seen
that each of the three cointegrated plasmids within pSK41 are flanked
by identical or nearly identical IS257 copies. Taken
together, these observations, along with the likelihood that two of the
cointegrated plasmids have resulted from IS257 insertions
that directly inactivate their replication-initiation genes and the
scarcity of naturally occurring RC plasmids carrying insertion
sequences, argue strongly for nonresolved replicative transposition of
IS257 as the basis for the cointegrative capture of these
plasmids (23, 35, 48).
Site-specific deletions in pSK41 family plasmids.
Several
researchers have described the generation of deletions within
pSK41-type plasmids that correspond to DNA segments between copies of
IS257 (30, 34). To investigate this phenomenon, we characterized two such deletion derivatives of pSK41, identified as
exconjugant progeny that had lost one or more resistance phenotypes; of
1,200 transconjugants screened, only 2 (<0.2%) were found to have
lost the capacity to confer aadD-encoded Nmr,
smr-encoded ethidium bromide (Eb) resistance, and/or
aacA-aphD-encoded Gmr. pSK5093 conferred a
Nms Ebs Gmr phenotype, and
restriction mapping demonstrated the loss of a DNA segment between
IS25741B and IS25741E
(Fig. 1), including three copies of IS257. pSK5094, which
conferred an Nmr Ebr Gms phenotype,
was found to have lost a DNA segment between
IS25741E and IS25741G,
including two IS257 copies. In both cases, nucleotide
sequencing indicated that the IS257 elements remaining at
the site of these deletions, IS2575093B and
IS2575094E, are likely to represent chimeras of
the elements that formerly bounded the deleted segments (Fig. 6). This
finding strongly implicates homologous recombination as the basis of
such deletions, as had been proposed previously (34, 52,
53). By using the available sequence variation, the crossover
points can be localized to between nt 231 and 472 for
IS2575093B and between nt 632 and 711 for
IS2575094E (Fig. 6).
Concluding remarks.
The completion of the pSK41 sequence
allows us to make some tentative conclusions about the evolution of
pSK41-type conjugative plasmids. The transfer systems of these plasmids
and that of the broad-host-range plasmid, pIP501, share a common
evolutionary ancestry, although their replication systems appear to be
distinct. Despite this and despite the relatedness of the pSK41
replication functions to those of staphylococcal
-lactamase-heavy-metal resistance plasmids, the degree of sequence
divergence and the dispersion of conjugation-associated genes on both
sides of the pSK41 rep region strongly suggest that
pSK41-type plasmids have not arisen from the en bloc addition of
conjugation functions to an existing, nontransmissible resistance
plasmid. It would seem more likely that the antimicrobial resistance
determinants on pSK41-like plasmids are contemporary additions.
Probable target duplications adjacent to
IS25741A and IS25741C
(Fig. 1), still evident despite the propensity of deletion events adjacent to IS257, support this proposal. These duplications
insinuate that the pSK41 rep and tra regions were
juxtaposed prior to their separation by insertion of IS257
and cointegrated plasmids, including pUB110. The phenotype(s), if any
other than conjugative transfer, associated with the primordial
pSK41-type plasmid is not known but may still be encoded in the segment
between IS25741G and
IS25741A (Fig. 2); the availability of this
sequence data should help to shed light on this possibility.
IS257 has clearly played a central role in the recent
evolutionary history of pSK41 family plasmids, representing a catalyst for adaptation to a new niche, viz., an environment of widespread antimicrobial use. Shaped by the activities of this element, the structure of pSK41 illustrates the selfish nature of transmissible plasmids and its relevance to the development of antimicrobial resistance in staphylococci. For instance, the incorporation of small
resistance plasmids presumably enhances the evolutionary fitness of the
plasmid in subsequent hosts rather than benefiting the cell in
which the cointegration event(s) occurred. The immobilization of
the composite Tn4001-like aminoglycoside resistance
transposon would seem to represent another manifestation of this
phenomenon, presumably contributing to plasmid maintenance in hosts
exposed to such antibiotics. The tight genetic linkage resulting
from the accretion of resistance determinants on transmissible plasmids is of obvious consequence to the acquisition, dissemination, and maintenance of multiresistance. The capacity of plasmids such as pSK41
to collect activities as they move horizontally through bacterial
populations highlights the importance of organisms, which may
themselves be nonpathogenic, that act as reservoirs or transient hosts.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank Melissa Brown, Ian Paulsen, and Carol Scaramuzzi for
helpful discussions and Keith Dyke for pointing out the similarity between portions of the Tn4001-hybrid structure and the
S. hominis chromosome.
This work was supported in part by a project grant from the National
Health and Medical Research Council (Australia). T.B. was the recipient
of an Australian Postgraduate Award. S.A. and A.L. were recipients of
Australian International Development Assistance Bureau scholarships.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: School of
Biological Sciences, University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales
2006, Australia. Phone: 61-2-9351-2376. Fax: 61-2-9351-4771. E-mail: skurray{at}bio.usyd.edu.au.
Present address: Division of Medical Microbiology, Department of
Pathology, Faculty of Medicine, Prince of Songkla University, Hadyai
90112, Thailand.
Present address: Department of Microbiology, Faculty of Medicine,
Siriraj Hospital, Mahidol University, Bangkok 10700, Thailand.
 |
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Journal of Bacteriology, September 1998, p. 4350-4359, Vol. 180, No. 17
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Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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