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Journal of Bacteriology, September 2007, p. 6594-6601, Vol. 189, No. 18
0021-9193/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.00668-07
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois 61801
Received 27 April 2007/ Accepted 26 June 2007
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Surprisingly, however, despite having a proposed mechanism of excision and integration that seemed to be very different from the mechanism of integration of site-specific tyrosine recombinases such as the phage lambda integrase, the integrases of Tn916 and CTnDOT had at least 5 amino acids of the 6-amino-acid C-terminal amino acid signature that has come to define the tyrosine recombinase family (12). In contrast to well-studied tyrosine recombinases, for which all of the six conserved amino acids are essential, only three of these amino acids in the CTnDOT were essential for function (9).
CTnBST is a newly discovered Bacteroides CTn. The sequence of CTnBST had no similarity to any part of the sequence of CTnDOT, raising the possibility that CTnBST was not a member of the CTnDOT family. Also, CTnBST differed from CTnDOT in that whereas the transfer frequency of CTnDOT is stimulated 100- to 1,000-fold by tetracycline, CTnBST exhibited constitutive transfer (4). The integrase of CTnBST (IntBST) also had the 6-amino-acid signature but appeared to differ from the other CTn integrases. CTnBST appears to be more like the other members of the tyrosine recombinase family, because it integrated much more site specifically (23). Target site selection is an important signature for each transposon, and it determines dissemination and the stability of the transposon. The preferred CTnBST integration site had 18 bp of sequence identity with a sequence that spanned the joined ends of the circular form of the CTn (ATAAATCTGGTAAATTTA). Strand exchanges that led to integration of the element presumably occurred within this region. CTnBST was also able to use other sites on the chromosome. A few secondary sites that were identified initially all shared a much smaller consensus region than the 18-bp site, AATCTGNNAAAT (23).
We show here that four of the six conserved amino acids that identify IntBST as a member of the tyrosine recombinase family are essential for integration. We also examine in more detail the sequence requirements for integration of CTnBST. We found that three base pairs (CTG), which are located on one side of the consensus region, are important for site selection. We deduced that one of the crossover events occurs adjacent to the C of the CTG sequence and that the second crossover event occurs 7 bp from this location.
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TABLE 1. Bacterial strains and plasmids
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Site-directed mutagenesis of intBST. Mutations in the CTnBST integrase were made using a Stratagene QuickChange mutagenesis kit. Primers carrying the specific mutations are shown in Table 2. The mini-BST plasmid pBJE2.1, which contains the intBST gene under control of its own promoter and the joined ends, was used as the template for the mutagenesis reaction (23). The mutagenized plasmid was transformed into E. coli S17-1 cells and isolated from the transformants. The intBST gene was sequenced to confirm the desired mutation and to exclude the presence of other mutations.
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TABLE 2. PCR primers used in this study
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FIG. 1. In vivo integration assay for attBST derivatives. E. coli BW19851 with pattBST derivatives, containing various lengths of attB cloned in pEPE, was the donor B. thetaiotaomicron BT4001 contains pIntBST and was used as the recipient. The integration frequency was calculated by determining the number of transconjugants per recipient. The types of resistance in parentheses function in the Bacteroides recipient BT4001, and those outside parentheses function in the E. coli donor. CmR, chloramphenicol resistance; EmR, erythromycin resistance; TcR, tetracycline resistance; ApR, ampicillin resistance.
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Analysis of the integration specificity of CTnBST. Two approaches were used to test whether a mini-element integrated into the preferred target site in the Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron chromosome. The mini-element was constructed as described previously (21). The mini-element contains a copy of intBST and attBST in a suicide vector so the transfer can be detected using the vector's antibiotic marker. The recipient does not have any CTnBST sequence in the chromosome. The first approach used was a Southern blot assay. Chromosomal DNA from independent colonies was isolated as described previously (16). DNA from each isolate was digested with HindIII, transferred to a membrane, and probed with a 423-bp PCR fragment (using primers F1418 and R1841 [Table 2]), which contains part of the intBST open reading frame. Thus, each integration event should have produced only one cross-hybridizing restriction fragment. A second approach was to use PCR to amplify the preferred site. Insertion into the preferred target site, attB1, was confirmed by PCR using primers to produce the right-end junction fragment (primers BST6E4FJ and BST12-1-2RJF [Table 2]). A lack of a PCR product indicated that there was integration into another site.
Cloning the end sequences of the integrated mini-elements. A plasmid rescue technique was utilized to determine the DNA sequences at the locations of secondary target sites into which the mini-BST element had integrated. The procedure used for plasmid rescue experiments was performed as previously described (23). This method provided the sequence of one of the junctions of the integrated mini-element. The chromosomal DNA adjacent to the mini-element was sequenced using primer R1130 (Table 2). This procedure gave the DNA sequence on the left side, the end of the integrated element that did not contain the integrase. The sequence of the integration site (attB) was first deduced by comparing this sequence with the joined-end sequence of the circular form (attBST) and the genome sequence of B. thetaiotaomicron 5482 (accession number NC 004663) (24). The right-side sequence of the integrated element was amplified using CTnBST right-end primers and a primer designed from the chromosomal sequence. The resulting amplicons were sequenced.
DNA sequencing. Sequencing reactions were preformed at the W. M. Keck Center for Comparative and Functional Genomics at the University of Illinois, Urbana. DNA and amino acid sequences were analyzed using the NCBI BLAST server.
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FIG. 2. Phylogenetic tree of members of the tyrosine recombinase family obtained using Clustal W. IntBST is underlined.
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TABLE 3. In vivo integration frequency and target specificity of IntBST mutants compared to IntDOT
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Mutational analysis of the 18-bp attBST site. Previously, a miniature form of CTnBST was constructed. This mini-BST plasmid contained the integrase gene, intBST, and over 700 bp of contiguous DNA that spanned the joined ends of the circular form, including the 18-bp sequence (23). To localize the attBST site and facilitate mutagenesis, we needed to reduce the size of attBST and separate the intBST gene from the attBST sequence. The minimal attBST site was determined using an in vivo integration assay that we developed, as shown in Fig. 1. The integrase gene, intBST, was cloned separately under control of its own promoter in the recipient strain. E. coli BW19851, which had a suicide vector, pEPE, containing different lengths of attBST, was used as the donor for filter mating. Figure 3 shows the deletion constructs cloned into the pEPE vector, and the results showed that in vivo integration required about 270 bp of attBST, including the 18-bp region.
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FIG. 3. Minimal attBST site determined by the in vivo integration assay. The filled rectangle represents the 18-bp common core sequence. intBST is at the right end of the sequence. The positive control, shown at the top, was pDJE2.1 containing about 700 bp of attBST, including the 18-bp sequence. The negative control, shown at the bottom, was the pEPE vector. The pattBST vectors were constructed as described in Materials and Methods, and filter mating was performed as shown in Fig. 1. The filled rectangle indicates the 18-bp sequence where crossover occurs.
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TABLE 4. Site-directed mutagenesis of the 18-bp common core sequence in attBST
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Most mutant attBST sites integrated into the preferred target site with a frequency comparable to the wild-type level (50 to 75%). Mutants C7G and T8C had no effect on the integration frequency but, like mutant G9C, did not integrate into the preferred target site, attB1.
Target sites used by attBST mutants C7G, T8C, and G9C. The mutational analysis of the 18-bp region revealed three base pairs (bp 7, 8, and 9) that played an important role in target site selection. Mutations in these base pairs abolished integration into the preferred site. To characterize the sites used for integration by the attBST mutants, we performed a Southern blot analysis and determined the sequences of the secondary sites chosen by the mutants. A plasmid rescue technique and PCR were used to obtain the sequences of the chromosomal sites as described in Materials and Methods.
Southern blot analysis of several independent insertions for each attBST confirmed the preliminary PCR finding that none of the mutants integrated into the preferred target site, attB1 (data not shown). All three attBST mutants integrated into many different sites in the chromosome and sometimes into multiple sites in the same recipient. Figure 4 shows the results for mutant G9C; three of the eight transconjugants contained multiple insertions (Fig. 4, lanes 1, 2, and 6).
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FIG. 4. Southern blot analysis of mini-BST insertions in BT4001 by G9C mutants. Mini-BST was transferred from E. coli S17-1 carrying pattBSTG(9)C to BT4001 by conjugation. DNA was extracted from eight independent isolates, digested with HindIII, and run on an agarose gel. The Southern blot of the gel was probed with a labeled 423-bp region of intBST which detected right-end junctions. The HindIII fragments of lambda were in lane , and the sizes of the bands (in kilobase pairs) are indicated on the left. The arrow indicates the expected band for the wild type.
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FIG. 5. Southern blot and PCR results for CTnBST and mini-BST excision. Three strains containing CTnBST (CTnBST lanes) and three strains containing mini-BST (Mini-BST lanes) were tested to detect excision either by Southern blotting (A) or by PCR (B). The Southern blot of the gel was probed with a right-end fragment containing intBST. The location of the 2.4-kb PstI fragment from the excised CTnBST containing the joined ends is indicated on the left (BJE), and the location of the expected HindIII fragment of the excised mini-BST is indicated on the right (BJE?). The results for PCR amplification of BJE of the strains shown in panel A are shown immediately below the Southern blot in panel B. The size of the BJE amplicon is 410 bp.
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FIG. 6. Sequences of attB sites used by mutant mini-elements and consensus sequences of the attB sites relative to attBST. The panels show the 18-bp sequences of an integrating mini-element and the corresponding 18-bp sequence of the chromosomal attB site. The sequences are shown with spaces between bp 6 and bp 7 and between bp 13 and bp 14 to emphasize the putative crossover between the attBST and the attBs. The 18-bp attBST sequence of CTnBST is shown at the top. The underlined bases in the attBST sites are the mutated bases. Immediately below each attBST sequence is the sequence of the site in the chromosome (attB) into which the mini-element integrated. Below each pair of attBST and attB sequences are the left and right junctions of the integrated mini-element. The left junction of each insertion was cloned by plasmid rescue and sequenced. The right junction was obtained by PCR using a primer designed from the identified chromosomal site and the right end of the mini-element. An alignment of attBST and the attB sites is included. The consensus sequence is shown at the bottom of each panel; residues in uppercase letters are conserved in all the attBST and attB sites, and residues in lowercase letters are conserved in a majority of the sequences. Panels A, B, and C show the integration sequences of three mutants. The vertical arrows indicate the base pair that underwent mismatch correction.
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Since IntBST is a new member of the tyrosine recombinase family, CTnBST integration was characterized and compared with the known recombinase integration systems, such as lambda, CTnDOT, and NBU1. The integration differences among these conjugative transposons can help us understand their origin and evolution within different species. Moreover, the integrases provide a newly expanded view of the varieties of proteins in the tyrosine recombinase family. We carried out the first systematic mutational analysis of the crossover region of CTnBST. The minimal attBST site was about 270 bp long, a size comparable to that of the lambda attP site and att sites in many other tyrosine recombinase systems. Since the site within which the crossover occurs is much smaller (18 bp), the extra DNA is probably necessary for the formation of the intasome that catalyzes the integration reaction. This complex presumably includes the CTnBST integrase plus an unknown number of host factors.
Single-base-pair mutations in the common core sequence of CTnBST had no influence on integration frequency. This is different from what occurs in lambda and many other systems, where mutations in the common core sequence decrease the integration frequency dramatically. It is more similar to the common core sequence requirements of two other CTns, CTnDOT and Tn916, which tolerate changes in most of the bases (2, 6). Although changes in individual bases of the attBST site did not affect the integration frequency, some of these changes, in particular changes in 3 bp at the 5' end of the 7-bp overlap region, did affect target site selection. A similar phenomenon has recently been observed in secondary site sequence requirements used by phage lambda (15). In the case of IntBST, however, integration in the secondary sites occurs for the mutant sites nearly as frequently as integration into the preferred wild-type site.
The requirement for sequence identity between the strand exchange sites in CTnBST is compatible with the strand-swapping model proposed for the lambda system (11). In this model, there are two symmetrical swaps of two or three nucleotides, connected by a central isomerization step between the four junction arms. Sequence homology is sensed during the annealing step prior to strand joining. Inhibition of the first swap by sequence heterology has a more severe effect on the overall reaction than inhibition of the second swap because the Holiday intermediate can be resolved by Int-independent mechanisms in vivo (11).
Recombination between wild-type attBST and attB sites could occur by the strand-swapping mechanism. However, recombinational events that created the crossovers shown in Fig. 6 are unlikely to occur by a strict strand-swapping mechanism because of mismatches in the sites. When the joined ends and the target sites have different sequences in the crossover region, mismatches form during recombination. If recombination occurs, the heterology is then resolved after recombination by DNA replication or mismatch repair. The mismatch correction that we observed suggests that both strands are exchanged during recombination. For example, the attB2 site shown in Fig. 6A has a G at position 11, while attBST has a T. Only a double-strand exchange can explain the appearance of T in the left- and right-end sequences. We found examples of mismatch correction at each of the four base pairs downstream of the conserved 3-bp region, suggesting that they are within the cleavage region (Fig. 6).
Figure 7 shows where cleavage could occur to explain the data shown in Fig. 6A to C. IntBST cleavage would occur between bp 6 and 7 on the top strand and between bp 13 and 14 on the bottom strand. The strand-swapping model requires that the 3 bp lie within the cleavage site. Strand exchange might occur first in the top strand, requiring strict homology, followed by exchange that does not require strict homology. The target site specificity may be determined by the ability to ligate after the top strand is cleaved and transferred to the partner site. The cleavage sites are adjacent to 5-bp inverted repeats in attBST, which might serve as the integrase binding sites. Lambda, CTnDOT, and NBU1 also have 7 bp between the cleavage sites within an inverted repeat (9, 13, 17).
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FIG. 7. Possible staggered cut sites for CTnBST integration. The 18-bp common core region for CTnBST and attB1 is shown. The vertical arrows indicate possible IntBST cleavage sites on the top and bottom strands. The underlined base pairs were important in target specificity. The italicized base pairs were shown to produce heterology which was resolved after integration. The inverted repeats are indicated by horizontal arrows.
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The much higher excision level of CTnBST than of the mini-BST plasmid pBJE2.1 suggests that excision genes are involved in mediating the high excision level observed for CTnBST by both Southern blotting and PCR analysis. IntBST alone, however, is able to mediate the low level of excision detected by PCR, suggesting that IntBST is able to perform strand exchange and DNA cleavage. This is similar to what occurs in vitro with lambda and Tn916 (8, 14). For Tn916, Int alone can promote excision in vivo in some hosts and is able to mediate a low level of excision under some conditions in vitro (14). IntDOT, however, has not been shown to mediate excision alone, and it requires multiple proteins for detectable excision (3).
Published ahead of print on 6 July 2007. ![]()
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and by Int mutants with altered recombination specificity. J. Mol. Biol. 329:983-996.[CrossRef][Medline]This article has been cited by other articles:
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