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Journal of Bacteriology, July 2006, p. 4871-4878, Vol. 188, No. 13
0021-9193/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.00210-06
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Division of Microbial Diseases, Eastman Dental Institute, University College London, 256 Gray's Inn Road, London WC1X 8LD, United Kingdom,1 Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, Institute of Medical Sciences, University of Aberdeen, Foresterhill, Aberdeen AB25 2ZD, United Kingdom2
Received 8 February 2006/ Accepted 7 April 2006
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attR > attL > attBCd > attBBs3. We conclude that TndX has a strong preference for attBCd over other potential recombination sites in the B. subtilis genome and therefore behaves as a site-specific recombinase. |
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Tn5397 has been completely sequenced, revealing that it is very closely related to the extensively studied, conjugative transposon Tn916 in the regions concerned with transfer and resistance to tetracycline (25). However, the regions required for transposition in Tn916 and Tn5397 are completely different. The insertion and excision of Tn5397 are dependent on the large serine recombinase TndX, the only Tn5397-encoded protein required for these functions (33, 34). Tn916, on the other hand, requires the tyrosine recombinase (Int) for integration and Int and the accessory factor Xis for excision (15). Although Tn916 can insert into multiple sites in most hosts, it does have preferred integration sites and, in some strains of C. difficile, it has one highly preferred site (33). The clostridia also contain mobilizable transposons such as Tn4451 and its close relatives that integrate and excise via the transposase TnpX (1, 2, 9, 17-19). TnpX and TndX share about 30% amino acid identity. Because Tn4451 transposes at a low frequency, only a limited number of insertion sites have been sequenced. However, this analysis indicates that there is a consensus target for TnpX which resembles the ends of the transposon (9).
Recombination by TndX is believed to occur using a mechanism similar to that described for the resolvase/invertases (22). In the model for excision, the ends of the transposon, attL and attR, synapse with the transposase, which is followed by concerted cleavage of all four DNA strands, forming 2-bp staggered breaks and transient covalent linkages to protein via the recessed 5' ends. By analogy with the resolvase/invertase mechanism, a 180° rotation of one pair of half sites then occurs to configure the DNA sites into the recombinant format and the DNA backbone is relegated. Thus, the products of excision are an intact (donor) chromosome having suffered a precise deletion of the transposon and a circular form of Tn5397 that is the transposition and conjugational intermediate (22). The recombination site in the circular form of Tn5397, attTn, is the joint where the two ends of the transposon have been ligated (Fig. 1A). When the element transfers to a new host, attTn recombines with the target site attB to establish the transposon in the genome of the recipient. Transposition of Tn5397 has been observed in C. difficile, B. subtilis, Enterococcus faecalis, and Escherichia coli (in a genetically engineered system) (20, 35), and the sequences of the ends of the insertions suggest that the crossover has occurred between 5' GA in the genome target and 5' GA in attTn.
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FIG. 1. Sequences of recombination substrates for TndX. (A) Comparison of the sequences of attTn formed within the circular joined intermediate of Tn5397 and the preferred target site in C. difficile, attBCd. (B) Sequences of the known target sites for Tn5397 in C. difficile (attBCd) and B. subtilis (attBs2, attBs3, attBs4, and attBs5a). Black shading indicates identity, dark-gray shading indicates 80% conservation, and light-gray shading indicates 60% conservation. The two asterisks above the sequences 5' GA indicate the dinucleotides that are inferred to take part in the DNA cleavage and rejoining.
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TABLE 1. Plasmids and strains used in this study
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To construct pHWattBCd, the insertion site of Tn5397 in C. difficile (attBCd) was amplified by PCR with primers P1 (5397RGI/Bam) (5'-GCGGGATCCGAAAACTGCTTGGATTCAGA-3') and P2 (5397flank/Bam) (5'-GCGGGATCCGCATATTACGCATCTCATTA-3'), using CD37 genomic DNA as a template. Underlining in the sequences indicates restriction enzyme recognition sites. This fragment was digested with BamHI and cloned into the vector pSWEET (3) which was digested with the same enzyme. pHWattBCd2 was obtained by ligating two copies of the above-mentioned fragment in direct repeat and then ligating it to the vector. To construct pHWattBCd(TC) by changing the central GA to TC (top strand) and TC to GA (bottom strand), two rounds of PCRs were carried out. In the first round, primers P1 and P3 (IS/tc-ga) (5'-GTTCTTCCATTACCAGAACTAAAAGGATGAAC-3') were used to amplify the left part of the target, while primers P4 (IS/ga-tc) (5'-GTTCATCCTTTTAGTTCTGGTAATGGAAGAAC-3') and P2 were used to amplify the right part of the target in two independent reactions. The products were purified and used as templates in the second-round PCR with primers P1 and P4. The final product was cloned into a pSWEET vector in the same way as that for pHWattBCd. To generate the 50-bp C. difficile (attB50) target, two oligonucleotides, IS50-top (5'-GATCCTTTGTATATGTTCATCCTTTTAGTGATGGTAATGGAAGAACATCAAGAG-3') and IS50-bottom (5'-GATCCTCTTGATGTTCTTCCATTACCATCACTAAAAGGATGAACATATACAAAG-3'), were designed. These were annealed to a double-stranded fragment with BamHI sites at both ends. This was cloned into the pSWEET vector via the BamHI site as described before to generate pHWattB50. To generate attL, two oligonucleotides, attL-top (5'-GATCCTTTGTATATGTTCATCCTTTTAGTGATGGAAATGTACCATCAAGACACCT-3') and attL-bottom (5'-GATCCAGGTGTCTTGATGGTACATTTCCATCACTAAAAGGATGAACATATACAAA-3'), were designed. These were annealed and cloned into the pSWEET vector via the BamHI site as described before to generate pHWattL. To generate attR, two oligonucleotides, attR-top (5'-GATCCAGTGTCTCATTGATACATTCTCTGATGGTAATGGAAGAACATCAAGAGC-3') and attR-bottom (5'-GATCCGCTCTTGATGTTCTTCCATTACCATCAGAGAATGTATCAATGAGACACTG-3'), were designed. These were annealed and cloned into the pSWEET vector via the BamHI site as described before to generate pHWattR. To generate attTn, two oligonucleotides, attTn-top (5'-GATCCAGTGTCTCATTGATACATTCTCTGA TGGAAATGTACCATCAAGACACCT-3') and attTn-bottom (5'-GATCCAGGTGTCTTGATGGTACATTTCCATCAGAGAATGTATCAATGAGACACTG-3'), were designed. These were annealed and cloned into the pSWEET vector via the BamHI site as described before to generate pHWattTn. All constructs were confirmed by PCR and DNA sequencing using primers 5'Bam/SW (5' GATGTAGCAGTGTTAAGAGAGC-3') and 3'Bam/SW (5'CGGGCAGACATGGCCTGCCCGG-3'). To generate attBBs2, oligonucleotides attBBS2-top (5'-GATCAGGATGTTCATGCACCCATTTCGGGAAGAAAATAATGCCATGCATGCGTT-3') and attBS2-bottom (5'-GATCAACGCATGCATGGCATTATTTTCTTCCCGAAATGGGTGCATGAACATCCT-3') were annealed. To generate attBBs3, oligonucleotides attBS3-top (5'-GATCCCAGCTCCTGGATATTTGTTGTATGATGGAAACGGGGAAACCCATACAGC-3') and attBS3-bottom (5'-GATCGCTGTATGGGTTTCCCCGTTTCCATCATACAACAAATATCCAGGAGCTGG-3') were annealed.
Genomic DNA from C. difficile and B. subtilis was prepared by using the gram-positive DNA isolation kit (Puregene). Plasmid DNA was prepared by using the QIAGEN plasmid mini-prep kit (QIAGEN). The Southern blotting experiments were performed using an ECL direct nucleic acid labeling and detection system (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) according to the manufacturer's instructions.
To carry out band shift assays, the instruction manual of the digoxigenin (DIG) gel shift kit (Roche) was followed with some modifications. To label the probe, 3.85 pmol of double-stranded DNA was dissolved in distilled water to make the final volume of 10 µl and then the following reagents were added: 4 µl of 5x labeling buffer (1 M potassium cacodylate, 0.125 M Tris-HCl, 1.25 mg/ml bovine serum albumin, pH 6.6 [25°C]), 4 µl of 25 mM CoCl2, 1 µl of 1 mM DIG-11-ddUTP (DIG-ddUTP), and 1 µl of terminal transferase (50 units/µl). The mixture was incubated at 37°C for 15 min before being placed on ice. The reaction was stopped by adding 2 µl of 0.2 M EDTA (pH 8.0). In the band shift reaction, purified TndX was added to a mixture containing 200 mM potassium cacodylate, 25 mM Tris-HCl, 0.250 mg/ml bovine serum albumin, 1 µg of poly(dI-dC), 0.1 µg of poly L-lysine, 0.310 pmol of DIG-labeled probe and water to make up to 20 µl. Up to 100x molar ratio of specific competitor was added when required. The reaction mixture was incubated at 4°C for 20 min before being mixed with 5 µl of loading buffer (0.25x Tris-borate-EDTA buffer, 60%; glycerol, 40%; bromophenol blue, 0.2% [wt/vol]) and analyzed on a 6% acrylamide gel. After the electrophoresis, the DNA was transferred to a nylon membrane by contact blotting. The DNA was fixed to the membrane by UV cross-linking and then detected by chemiluminescent detection.
The binding affinity of TndX protein for each of the above-mentioned DNA fragments was determined quantitatively with Scion Image analyzing software (Scion Co.).
Purification of TndX. TndX was expressed in E. coli as a fusion to the C terminus of a 10-His tag as described before (35). The cell pellets were dissolved, and the soluble fraction was obtained by using Bug Buster master mix (Novagen). TndX was purified by using the Ni-resin (Clontech Laboratories, Inc.). The manufacturer's protocols were followed. Protease inhibitor cocktails (for use in the purification of poly-His-tagged proteins [Sigma]) were added to the supernatant. The amount used was 1 ml cocktail per 20 g of E. coli cell extract.
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Analysis of the genomic DNA of 28 independent, tetracycline-resistant transconjugants by Southern blotting and DNA sequencing showed that, in every case, Tn5397 had inserted into attBCd (Fig. 2A and E, lane 1). No insertions into any other B. subtilis targets were found. Another construct that contained two copies of the C. difficile target in direct repeat, B. subtilis::attBCd2 (derived by transformation of B. subtilis with pHWattBCd2), was also made. When B. subtilis::attBCd2 was used as a recipient, Tn5397 inserted into only one of the two sites (Fig. 2B and E, lanes 2 and 3). Analysis of 22 independent transconjugants showed that the element has almost equal chances of insertion into one site or the other. In total, of the 50 independent transconjugants obtained from mating experiments with C. difficile and B. subtilis containing attBCd, all had Tn5397 inserted in the C. difficile target. As a control, pSWEET lacking any insert was introduced into the B. subtilis target. When this strain was used as a recipient, we found Tn5397 inserted in eight different sites when nine independent transconjugants were analyzed (Fig. 2F). This result is similar to those obtained when B. subtilis cells without the integrated vector were used as recipients (33).
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FIG. 2. Analysis of the target site choices of Tn5397 in B. subtilis. (A to D) Schematic showing the insertion of Tn5397 into different target sites used here. The annotations are as follows: the light-blue shaded boxes represent the target inserted into the B. subtilis chromosome and the 5'GA dinucleotide that is thought to be the crossover region. The thin bands represent the flanking vector sequence. The expected product(s) after the conjugation and insertion of Tn5397 (dark blue), flanked by attL and attR, is shown underneath. The tndX gene was used as a probe in Southern blotting experiments with HindIII-digested chromosomal DNA. HindIII has one recognition site in tndX. If Tn5397 had inserted into any of these targets, two bands would hybridize to the probe (as shown). The different target sites used were attBCd (A), attBCd2 (B), attBCd(TC) (C), and the 50-bp attB target, attBCd50 (D). Panels E and F show results from Southern blotting of transconjugants containing various insertions of Tn5397 at different target sites. The DNA was digested with HindIII and probed with tndX. For clarity, only one clone from each cross is shown here. (E) Lane 1 shows DNA from an insertion into attBCd (see panel A); lanes 2 and 3 show DNA from an insertion into attBCd (see panel B); lane 4 shows DNA from an insertion into attBCd(CT) (lane 5) DNA in which the target site had been reduced to 50 bp (see panel D). (F) Southern blot analysis of B. subtilis DNA (containing unmodified pSWEET integrated into the chromosome) from six transconjugants containing insertions of Tn5397 isolated from independent mating experiments. If the element were integrating into the genome at random, one would expect to see two hybridizing fragments, one of 5,425 bp internal to Tn5397 and one of variable size representing the junction region.
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In order to determine whether Tn5397 was capable of excising from the attCd(TC) target, PCR for the circular form of Tn5397 in these strains was performed (33). A PCR product of the appropriate size was produced in all of the transconjugants tested (results not shown), indicating that the element is capable of excision from this site. As excision appears to be a requirement for the transfer of Tn5397, (34) it is very likely that these strains will be able to act as conjugal donors of the element.
attBCd could be reduced to 50 bp without loss of activity. The recombination sites employed by the phage-encoded serine integrases are approximately 50 bp in length (5, 10, 23, 32). The protected sites by TnpX are approximately 68 to 93 bp (1). We decided to test whether a 50-bp attBCd was still a preferred target site for Tn5397. Oligonucleotides encoding attBCd with the crossover sequence, 5' GA, located at the center were annealed and then ligated into pSWEET to generate pHWattBCd50, which was then transformed into B. subtilis. B. subtilis::attBCd50 transconjugants containing Tn5397 were analyzed by Southern blotting, PCR, and DNA sequencing, which showed that all 15 transconjugants analyzed had Tn5397 inserted into attBCd50 via the 5' GA dinucleotide at the center of the 50-bp target, resulting in an element flanked by 5' GA dinucleotides (Fig. 2D and E, lane 5). Thus, the 50-bp attBCd has retained its activity as a preferred target for insertion of Tn5397.
Tn5397 can integrate into attL and attR but not into attTn. The left (attL) or the right (attR) junction of Tn5397 inserted into attBCd each contain one-half of the attBCd preferred target. TndX can cause excision by recombination between attL and attR in the absence of any further Tn5397 gene products (35). This contrasts with the phage-encoded integrases that are highly directional, being able to cause only attP-attB recombination in the absence of any other proteins (32). It therefore seemed likely that TndX could recombine any combination of att sites, including attTn-attL and attTn-attR. To test whether attL and attR could be used as targets for Tn5397 insertion and whether they were preferred over other B. subtilis target sequences, pHWattL and pHWattR were constructed and the att sites were introduced into B. subtilis to form B. subtilis::attL and B. subtilis::attR, respectively. These 50-bp sites comprised, for attL, 25 bp of the left side of attBCd and 25 bp of the right side of attTn and, for attR, 25 bp of the left side of attTn and 25 bp of the right side of attBCd. Transconjugants of B. subtilis::attL and B. subtilis::attR containing Tn5397 were analyzed by Southern blotting and PCR and showed that Tn5397 inserted into the attL in four out of five transconjugants and into attR in three out of five transconjugants (Fig. 3A). DNA sequencing of the PCR products generated from transconjugants containing Tn5397 inserted at attL or attR demonstrated that insertion had occurred at the 5' GA crossover dinucleotide. A PCR was also performed for the empty target site; a product was obtained only when the transposon had inserted into a site other than attL or attR (Fig. 3B). The insertion of Tn5397 into attL or attR was unlikely to be due to homologous recombination, as there was only 25 bp of identity between attL or attR and Tn5397. Moreover, homologous recombination was not observed in experiments with two attTn sites (see below). Thus, attL and attR sites were recognized as preferred targets by the transposon.
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FIG. 3. Southern blot and PCR analyses of B. subtilis transconjugants containing either an attL or an attR site. DNA was prepared from independent transconjugants, digested with HindIII, blotted, and probed with tndX. If the element were integrating into the genome at random, one would expect to see two hybridizing fragments, one of 5,425 bp internal to Tn5397 and one of variable size representing the junction region, whereas if Tn5397 had integrated specifically into either attL or attR, bands of 5,425 bp and 2,387 bp should be observed. (A) Southern blots of five transconjugants from B. subtilis::attL (lanes 1 to 5) and B. subtilis::attR (lanes 6 to 10) (see the text for more details). If the targets are empty, they will be amplified by PCR using primers 5'Bam/SW and 3'Bam/SW, but if they are occupied by Tn5397, the 22-kb element will not generate a product under the conditions used. DNAs corresponding to the transconjugants used in panel A were subjected to PCR and run in agarose gels. The lane marked "+" is a positive control, where pHWattL or pHWattR was used as a template for PCR, and the lane marked "" was a negative control with no template.
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FIG. 4. Southern blot analysis of B. subtilis transconjugants containing attTn. B. subtilis cells containing attTn were used as recipients in matings with C. difficile containing Tn5397. DNA was prepared from transconjugants and digested with HindIII and probed with tndX. If the element were integrating into the attTn site, one would expect to see two hybridizing fragments, one of 5,425 bp internal to Tn5397 (Fig. 1 and 2) and one of 2,387 bp (or 603 bp, depending the orientation of the transposon in the genome), whereas insertion elsewhere in the genome would yield the 5,425-bp band and one of variable size representing the junction region. The results of Southern blotting of eight transconjugants are shown (see the text for more details).
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TndX binds sequence specifically to 50-bp attBCd, attL, attR, attTn, and attBBs, but with different affinities.
The data presented above strongly suggest that TndX is acting as a site-specific recombinase, targeting Tn5397 to a specific site in the C. difficile genome. If this is the case, then TndX will bind to attBCd in a sequence-specific manner and with an affinity not too dissimilar to those for its other substrates (attTn, attL, and attRs). A C-terminal His-tagged derivative of TndX was purified from E. coli and used in gel shift assays (Fig. 5) (35). The DNA probes were DIG labeled. Under the conditions used, TndX bound with the highest affinities to attTn and attR. In each case, even with the lowest concentration of protein used (0.275 µM), nearly the entire probe was shifted to form a complex with slower mobility (Fig. 5). With the attL probe, approximately half of the probe was bound at 0.275 µM TndX, suggesting a slightly lower relative affinity, and with the attBCd probe, about 50% of the probe was bound in the presence of 1.1 µM TndX. TndX bound to all of these probes in the presence of competitor DNA, and binding was greatly diminished if an excess of unlabeled probe was added. In contrast, TndX bound very poorly to attBBs3, with only a very small amount of bound probe observed in the presence of 1.35 µM TndX. These data confirm that TndX binds to all its substrate recombination sites, attTn, attL, attR, and attBCd, in a sequence-specific manner and that there is a binding preference, attTn
attR > attL > attBCd > attBBs3.
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FIG. 5. TndX binding to its recombination sites. Purified TndX with a C-terminal His tag was used in gel shift assays to determine relative binding affinities to attL (A), attR (B), attTn (C), and attBCd (D) and the pseudo-attB site from B. subtilis, attBBs3 (E). In all panels, the white arrowhead indicates the position of the free probe and the black arrowhead is the position of the major TndX-probe complex. (A to D) Increasing concentrations of TndX were added to the binding reactions to generate final concentrations of 0, 0.28, 0.55, 0.83, and 1.1 µM (lanes 1 to 5, respectively). Lane 6 contains the same binding reaction as does lane 5 except that 10-fold more unlabeled probe was added as a specific competitor. (E) The concentration of TndX added to each binding reaction was 0.17, 0.34, 0.68, and 1.35 µM (lanes 1 to 5, respectively).
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C31, Bxb1, and
RV1 (4, 11, 16, 30, 31, 32). The ability to switch the polarity of insertion of Tn5397 by changing the crossover sequence in attBCd to 5' TC is also strongly reminiscent of the phage integrases and implies that the same mechanism of recombination is employed by TndX. These data support the idea that during integration, the 5' GA dinucleotide in the attBCd is cleaved at the 3' end and exchanged with the similarly cleaved attTn site to generate the attL and attR sequences. The reverse occurs for excision. For the preferred site attBCd, the sequences that flank the 5' GA dinucleotide are probably recognized in a sequence-specific manner by TndX.
The experiments described here indicate similarities between the properties of the phage-encoded serine integrases and the transposase TndX. These similarities extend to the use of a preferred target site for integration. In vitro binding experiments with the TndX recombination sites indicated an order of preference, attTn
attR > attL > attBCd, and that binding was sequence specific. Although the apparent affinity for attBCd was the lowest out of these four substrates, the affinity was only about fourfold less than that for attL. When this specific target site is not present in the genome, however, there is sufficient flexibility in target site recognition such that other, pseudo-attB sites can be used, as is the case for B. subtilis, e.g., attBBs3. The use of pseudo-attB sites by the phage-encoded serine integrases has also been shown to occur (8). Binding assays with TndX indicated very low affinity for one of its pseudo-attB sites, attBBs3 (50% binding requires greater than 1.35 µM TndX), and this is consistent with it being occupied only in the absence of attBCd. These data are in contrast to the results obtained with the related enzyme TnpX, responsible for the integration and excision of the mobilizable clostridial transposon Tn4451 that had at least a 40-fold-higher affinity for the ends of the element than it did for its targets (1). It is possible that Tn4451 also has a preferred target that has not yet been identified.
Despite the similarities between the properties of TndX with the phage integrases, TndX is fundamentally different from the phage integrases as it alone can catalyze both excision and integration. We therefore expected TndX to be less selective in its use of different combinations of att sites for recombination. In fact, TndX could utilize attL and attR as targets for Tn5397 insertion. In these assays, insertions into other B. subtilis target sites were observed (one out of five for attL and two out of five for attR), suggesting that attL and attR are not as highly preferred as attBCd but are still preferred. The use of attL and attR by Tn5397 would imply that tandem insertions of Tn5397 may be obtained occasionally. In support of this idea, we observed that when Tn5397 is transferred to C. difficile CD37, two copies of the element are indeed found at specific sites (20). To our surprise, we observed that attTn was not used as a target for Tn5397 integration and appeared to be avoided. TndX bound to attTn and attR with the highest affinities, yet no recombination was observed between attTn and attTn and recombination between attTn and attR was arguably less preferred than that between attTn and attBCd. Therefore, it is not the strength of binding that determines the frequency of recombination. Instead, we propose that it is the conformation adopted by TndX when bound to its recombination sites that determines whether recombination occurs. This inability to recombine attTn-attTn is reminiscent of the phage integrases that also do not recombine attP-attP (or attB-attB, etc.) and this property may reflect a fundamental feature of the mechanism of recombination by the large serine recombinases.
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C31-encoded site-specific recombination system. J. Bacteriol. 184:5746-5752.
C31. Mol. Microbiol. 38:232-241.[CrossRef][Medline]
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