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Journal of Bacteriology, March 2007, p. 2170-2173, Vol. 189, No. 5
0021-9193/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.01536-06
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Transposon Tn7 Is Widespread in Diverse Bacteria and Forms Genomic Islands
,
Adam R. Parks and
Joseph E. Peters*
Department of Microbiology, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York
Received 2 October 2006/
Accepted 13 December 2006

ABSTRACT
We find that relatives of the bacterial transposon Tn
7 are widespread
in disparate environments and phylogenetically diverse species.
These elements form functionally diverse genomic islands at
the specific site of Tn
7 insertion adjacent to
glmS. This work
presents the first example of genomic island formation by a
DDE type transposon.

TEXT
Tn
7 is a 14-kb bacterial transposon that was originally discovered
in
Escherichia coli. This transposon is tightly regulated and
activates transposition only when specific targets are found
in the cell. Tn
7 can use two transposition pathways that recognize
different types of target sites with distinct but overlapping
sets of transposon-encoded proteins, TnsA, TnsB, TnsC, TnsD,
and TnsE (TnsABCDE) (Fig.
1) (reviewed in reference
6). The
TnsABC proteins constitute the core transposition machinery
that interacts with one of the two target site-selecting proteins,
TnsD or TnsE, to carry out transposition. TnsB is a member of
the retroviral integrase superfamily containing the characteristic
"DDE" motif, composed of aspartic acid and glutamic acid residues
that form the active site of the transposase (
23). TnsD is a
sequence-specific DNA binding protein that recognizes a sequence
in the
glmS gene that encodes the C terminus of glucosamine-6-phosphate
synthase. TnsD-mediated transposition is directed at a high
frequency into the
attTn
7 site, in the transcriptional terminator
for the
glmS gene, and has no detectable negative effect on
the host. TnsE does not recognize any particular DNA sequence
but preferentially directs transposition into mobile plasmids
by recognizing an aspect of transfer-associated DNA replication
(
17,
18,
27). Presumably, the TnsE-mediated pathway would facilitate
the dissemination of Tn
7 to new hosts, while the TnsD-mediated
pathway would provide a "safe haven" once in a new bacterial
host. As described below, we find multiple elements in diverse
bacteria that are clearly Tn
7 relatives. They contain homologs
of all five Tn
7 transposition proteins and are almost always
inserted into the
attTn
7 site of the host organism. These elements
appear to facilitate the accumulation of mobile DNA within the
attTn
7 site in the chromosome. The accumulated DNA observed
within the
attTn
7 sites appears to fit the definition of genomic
islands, i.e., large segments (>30 kb) of a bacterial genome
that have been acquired by horizontal transfer and confer fitness-enhancing
qualities (
10).
Since the TnsE pathway is used to preferentially transfer Tn
7 to mobile plasmids, we expected Tn
7-like transposons to be present
in a wide variety of hosts. Indeed, other reports have described
clinically isolated ß- and

-proteobacteria containing
Tn
7 (
8,
20). Laboratory experiments have shown that Tn
7 is capable
of transposition in many different hosts, but few naturally
occurring examples have been isolated (
7). We also suspected
that Tn
7 relatives might be present in organisms from diverse
habitats, given that the Tn
7-like transposon Tn
5468 had been
found in the
attTn
7 site of the acidophilic organism
Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans ATCC 33020 (
16). To address these hypotheses, we
used the BLAST and PSI-BLAST algorithms to query the GenBank
and Comprehensive Microbial Resource databases, using the amino
acid sequence of TnsE (
2-
4,
19). Our rationale was that TnsE
is essential for moving between bacteria, and it is the gene
most distal from
glmS that is necessary for transposition. We
found TnsE homologs in bacterial hosts from the

-proteobacteria,

-proteobacteria, and low-G+C, gram-positive firmicutes (Table
1; see also the supplemental material). The bacterial hosts
were from both terrestrial environments and marine environments
ranging from surface waters at various latitudes to deep-sea
hydrothermal vents.
To confirm that the TnsE homologs were indeed contained within
Tn
7-like elements, we used the Artemis Comparison Tool (release
4) to observe the synteny of
tnsABCDE genes and host genes flanking
the
attTn
7 locus (
1,
5). We found that the order and orientation
of transposon genes are highly conserved, although there are
some examples in which other open reading frames (ORFs) have
been inserted between the
tns genes (Fig.
1; see also the supplemental
material). None of the
tns genes had nonsense mutations that
might prevent these elements from remaining active. In every
case, the
tnsABCD genes could be found 5' of
tnsE, where sufficient
DNA sequence information was present for analysis. Most of the
Tn
7-like elements were found in the site that was equivalent
to the
attTn
7 site as found in
E. coli. Unexpectedly, there
were multiple examples where two nonidentical Tn
7-like transposons
had been inserted in tandem into the
attTn
7 locus. These tandem
insertions are very likely the result of independent transposition
events. While Tn
7 is typically discouraged from inserting more
than one element into the
attTn
7 locus by target site immunity,
it is likely that differences in the transposon ends and TnsBC
proteins from the nonidentical Tn
7-like elements diminished
the robustness of this process (
6,
24). We found three previously
undescribed Tn
7 relatives that were in genomic locations that
are likely to have been targeted by TnsE. These were found in
plasmids, and one was found in a putative terminus region (Table
1). In
E. coli, the region of the chromosome where DNA replication
terminates has been shown to be an alternate TnsE target (
17).
To further characterize the genetic diversity found within the Tn7-like transposons, we used Artemis (release 7) and the Artemis Comparison Tool to search the DNA sequences for the 5-bp target site duplications and the TnsB binding sites associated with the Tn7 end sequences (1, 5, 15, 22). Once the ends of each element had been identified, we classified the genes between the left and right transposon ends by their annotated functions (Fig. 1; see also the supplemental material). None of the elements contained the same complement of genes, aside from tnsABCDE. The annotated functions of the genes from each of the elements were diverse; however, DNA restriction and modification systems were common.
Because multiple nonidentical Tn7 relatives were found in Shewanella species, we also analyzed the contents of the putative attTn7 loci in the available Shewanella genomic sequences by searching for glmS and menB homologs, genes that define the attTn7 site found in this genus (Fig. 1). Out of six Shewanella species that had genes inserted into the attTn7 site, three contained Tn7-like elements, one contained repeats that may have been a degenerate Tn7 end (Fig. 1), and two contained no identifiable Tn7 components (Shewanella frigidmarina NCIMB 400 [CP000447] and Shewanella amazonensis SB2B [AAIN01000058]). The genetic contents of the attTn7 site in multiple species match the description of genomic islands. We found multiple examples of genes that are typically associated with genomic or pathogenicity islands, such as type III secretion systems, bacteriophage-related genes, non-Tn7-like transposases, heavy metal detoxification genes, and DNA restriction and modification systems. Genomic islands commonly form proximal to tRNA genes, presumably through the integration of bacteriophage or integrative conjugal elements (formerly called conjugative transposons) (10). Bacteriophage and integrative conjugal elements use conservative site-specific recombinases that require DNA sequence homology between target and donor molecules. We propose that Tn7 is able to initiate genomic island formation by a transposition process that requires no DNA sequence homology.
From the examples of Tn7 relatives shown here, especially those found within the Shewanella species, we can suggest a sequence of events that would lead from one insertion to the localization of genomic islands in the attachment site and that may lack almost all recognizable features of Tn7 (Fig. 1). One Tn7 relative may operate as a "founder element" that is able to locate and safely transpose into the bacterial chromosome, bringing with it other mobile elements and possibly attachment sites for bacteriophages, integrons, or other transposons. After multiple Tn7 transposition events accumulate in the attachment site, recombination between these elements may enhance evolution by reassortment (e.g., Fig. 1c to e). If either the left or the right end of Tn7 is lost, the compromised element would presumably be subject to reductive evolution and only the most highly selected components would remain (e.g., Shewanella denitrificans OS-217 in Fig. 1f). The formation of genomic islands in the attTn7 site is likely a collaborative process that draws on the ability of the TnsD pathway to target this highly conserved "safe site" within the chromosome and the ability of the TnsE pathway to move the element into the mobile DNA pool.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank the members of the Peters laboratory for comments on
the manuscript.
This work was funded by a grant from the National Science Foundation (MCB-0315316).

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Microbiology, Cornell University, 175a Wing Hall, Ithaca, NY 14853. Phone: (607) 255-2271. Fax: (607) 255-3904. E-mail:
jep48{at}cornell.edu.

Published ahead of print on 28 December 2006. 
Supplemental material for this article may be found at http://jb.asm.org/. 

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Journal of Bacteriology, March 2007, p. 2170-2173, Vol. 189, No. 5
0021-9193/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.01536-06
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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