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Journal of Bacteriology, April 2009, p. 2414-2418, Vol. 191, No. 7
0021-9193/09/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.01258-08
Copyright © 2009, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Functional Analysis of Insertion Sequence ISAba1, Responsible for Genomic Plasticity of Acinetobacter baumannii
Pauline D. Mugnier,
Laurent Poirel, and
Patrice Nordmann*
Service de Bactériologie-Virologie, INSERM U914: "Emerging Resistance to Antibiotics," Hôpital de Bicêtre, Assistance Publique/Hôpitaux de Paris, Faculté de Médecine et Université Paris Sud, 94275 Le Kremlin-Bicêtre, France
Received 8 September 2008/
Accepted 2 January 2009

ABSTRACT
IS
Aba1 is an insertion sequence that is widely distributed in
Acinetobacter baumannii. We demonstrated here that IS
Aba1 and
the composite transposon Tn
2006 are capable of transposition,
generating 9-bp target site duplications. The expression of
the IS
Aba1 transposase-encoding gene was downregulated by translational
frameshifting.

TEXT
Insertion sequences (IS) are the smallest and the most abundant
transposable elements (<2.5 kb) capable of independent transposition
in microbial genomes (
20). They cause insertion mutations and
genome rearrangements and enhance the spread of resistance and
virulence determinants within species (
2,
12,
16,
18,
23). Based
on previous in silico analyses, IS
Aba1 is bracketed by 15-bp
short inverted repeat sequences. IS
Aba1 is bound by 9-bp short
direct repeats that correspond to target site duplications likely
generated upon transposition and possesses the acidic amino
acid triad DDE (
5,
10,
13).
ISAba1 has been identified in Acinetobacter baumannii (10), which is a gram-negative bacterium causing nosocomial outbreaks and showing a multidrug resistance phenotype (28, 34). ISAba1 has been identified in association with several antibiotic resistance genes in A. baumannii (17, 26, 30, 32). The role of ISAba1 in the expression of the antibiotic resistance gene of A. baumannii has been demonstrated for blaampC, encoding the naturally occurring cephalosporinase, and for the blaOXA-23 gene, encoding a carbapenem-hydrolyzing oxacillinase, but it might act similarly with other resistance genes (6, 7, 10). ISAba1 might also be responsible for the mobility of blaOXA-23, with two copies bracketing this ß-lactamase gene and forming a composite transposon (defined as Tn2006) (7). The main objective of this study was to determine the functionality of ISAba1 as a mobile element and to analyze its impact on the plasticity of the A. baumannii genome.
In order to follow the transposition of ISAba1, this element was tagged. An ScaI restriction site was inserted upstream of the transposase coding sequence and downstream of the right inverted repeat in order to not impair the transposase-encoding gene, using primers pre-ISAba1-5'ext and ISAba1-3'extScaI (Table 1). ISAba1-ScaI was cloned in pCR-BluntII-TOPO vector (kanamycin resistant). A PCR product corresponding to the entire blaTEM-1 gene sequence, encoding an ampicillin resistance marker (25), was inserted in the ScaI restriction site, giving rise to recombinant plasmid pISAba1-TEM-1. The recombinant plasmid, introduced in the Escherichia coli TOP10 recipient strain by electrotransformation as previously described (21), was selected on Trypticase soy agar plates containing kanamycin (30 µg/ml) and amoxicillin (50 µg/ml). The recombinant plasmid pISAba1-TEM-1 was electroporated into E. coli RZ211 (pOX38-Gen; Genr, a transfer-proficient F plasmid derivative) for transposition experiments (8). Selection was performed on gentamicin (8 µg/ml)-, kanamycin (30 µg/ml)-, and amoxicillin (50 µg/ml)-containing plates. E. coli RZ211 was then used as a donor for mating-out assays with E. coli J53 Azider, with selection on gentamicin (8 µg/ml) and azide (100 µg/ml) with or without amoxicillin (50 µg/ml)-containing plates, as described previously (14, 22). The transposition frequency was calculated by dividing the number of Genr Amxr Azider transconjugants by the number of Genr Azider transconjugants. All of the Genr Amxr Azider colonies were screened for kanamycin susceptibility to exclude those that may have resulted from nontransposition events. The transposition frequency (mean plus or minus standard deviation) determined in E. coli (ISAba1-TEM-1) was (2.1 ± 0.7) x 10–7. (For the measurement of transposition frequencies, standard deviation was calculated from three independent cultures. Statistical analysis was performed using the Student t test; a P value of
0.05 was considered significant.)
The insertion sites of IS
Aba1-TEM-1 were determined with seven
randomly chosen Gen
r Amx
r Azide
r Kan
s transconjugants by DNA
sequencing (
29) the external neighboring regions of the inverted
repeats using primers IS
Aba1-5'ext and IS
Aba1-3'ext (Applied
Biosystems 3100 sequencer) (Table
1). A 9-bp target site duplication,
consistent with a transposition event, was observed. Insertions
had occurred on seven different sites, and alignment of those
insertion site sequences together with those identified in the
genome of
A. baumannii AYE, a multidrug-resistant clinical isolate
(
24,
33), revealed a consensus motif (AAATAAATT) (see Fig.
2)
corresponding to an AT-rich target site sequence.
Since changes in growth conditions may affect the transposition
efficiency of several mobile elements (
19), the transposition
of IS
Aba1 was determined after addition of several antibiotics
as described previously (
14). The antibiotic concentrations
studied were 1/2, 1/4, and 1/10 of the MICs. The ciprofloxacin
effect was studied since fluoroquinolones have been shown to
induce antibiotic resistance in
Vibrio cholerae through an SOS-mediated
response (
3). Transposition assays were performed as described
above. No statistical difference was observed for IS
Aba1 transposition
frequency by adding different antibiotics at the studied concentrations
(Table
2).
Translational control of transposition by frameshifting has
been demonstrated for several IS (
9,
15). IS
Aba1 contains two
consecutive and overlapping open reading frames (ORFs), with
the second ORF (
orfB) at phase –1 relative to the upstream
ORF (
orfA) at phase 0 (Fig.
1). It was therefore likely that
a frameshift might be necessary to give rise to a unique and
likely functional transposase (
5,
27). Analysis of the IS
Aba1 sequence showed a frameshift motif, made of seven adenosines
at position 458. The AAA AAA A motif was changed to AAA AA
G AA in order to generate a coding sequence that does not require
any frameshifting and therefore to generate a constitutive expression
of the transposase gene (the change is underlined). Site-directed
mutagenesis was performed to add a guanine residue on the pIS
Aba1-TEM-1
plasmid, yielding the pIS
Aba1-mut-TEM-1 plasmid, according to
the manufacturer's recommendations (QuikChange site-directed
mutagenesis kit; Stratagene). Transposition experiments were
performed as described above. Transposition efficiency (transposition
frequency mean plus or minus standard deviation) was (1.8 ±
5.0)
x 10
–4 using the modified IS
Aba1 (IS
Aba1-mut-TEM-1),
corresponding to a 1,000-fold increase compared to that of the
native IS
Aba1 (Tn
2006; see below). This increased transposition
efficiency might result from a constitutive expression of the
transposase. IS
Aba1 exhibits an A
7 motif that we showed to be
responsible for a negative regulation of
tnpA expression.
The genetics of acquisition of the
blaOXA-23 gene had been previously
investigated, and the composite transposon Tn
2006 was identified
(
7). The entire Tn
2006 sequence was cloned in pBK-CMV vector
(kanamycin resistant), and transposition events were analyzed
as described previously (
14). The
blaOXA-23 gene conferring
resistance to amoxicillin provided a marker to follow transposition
events. The transposition efficiency of Tn
2006 was found to
be (1.6 ± 2.5)
x 10
–8, being 10-fold lower than
that observed with a single IS
Aba1 element, suggesting that
IS
Aba1 transposition frequency might decrease with the length
of the mobilized DNA fragment.
To demonstrate that the ISAba1 element possesses promoter sequences for tnpA gene expression, the site of transcription initiation for the tnpA gene was mapped from RNA of A. baumannii AYE (33), using the 5' RACE (rapid amplification of cDNA ends) PCR technique (version 2.0; Invitrogen, Life Technologies, Cergy-Pontoise, France). The +1 transcription start was found to be 73 bp upstream of the start codon. The promoter Pin was subsequently defined to be made of the –10 (TACTAT) and –35 (TAATAA) boxes separated by 18 bp (Fig. 1). We showed here that the tnpA gene possesses promoter sequences, conferring on ISAba1 the property to be an autonomous mobile element.
In order to expand the knowledge related to ISAba1 distribution among the Acinetobacter genus, 14 different species of Acinetobacter were screened by PCR. ISAba1 was found in wild-type and in carbapenem-resistant A. baumannii isolates obtained from worldwide sources but also in five other Acinetobacter species (Table 3).
In silico analysis of the
A. baumannii AYE genome (
24,
33) identified
21 copies of IS
Aba1, differing only by a single-base-pair substitution
(guanine to adenine at position 65) located upstream of
orfA,
and therefore, modifying neither the coding sequence nor the
promoter sequences of the transposase gene. IS
Aba1-related gene
disruption was found for different genes. Seven configurations
in which IS
Aba1 was located close to and upstream of genes were
identified, likely providing promoter sequences enhancing their
expression. Six copies of IS
Aba1 were in such configuration
that they were forming composite transposons. Two copies (both
bracketed by target site duplications) surrounded the
plpD gene
encoding a putative phospholipase D, and the same IS
Aba1-
plpD-IS
Aba1 structure was identified twice as a composite transposon named
Tn
plpD (Fig.
2). Two copies of Tn
plpD had thus been very likely
generated upon IS
Aba1-mediated transposition, giving rise to
a
plpD multicopy. By analyzing in silico the recently available
A. baumannii genome sequences, nine copies of IS
Aba1 were identified
from strain AB0057 (
1) and only a single copy was identified
in strain ATCC 17978 (
31), whereas IS
Aba1 was absent from strains
AB307-0294, AB900 (
1), SDF (
33), and ACICU (
11).
Here, we demonstrated that ISAba1 and the composite transposon Tn2006 were capable of transposition in E. coli strains as well as the ability of ISAba1 to mobilize an antibiotic resistance gene. The ISAba1 element contains two ORFs, encoding a functional transposase, regulated by a mechanism named programmed translational frameshifting that has already been identified at least for IS3 family members (4). This study reports on the very first functional properties of an IS element in A. baumannii.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was financed by a grant from the Ministère
de l'Éducation Nationale et de la Recherche, Université
Paris XI, France, and mostly by a grant from the European Community
(DRESP2; grant LSHM-CT-2005-018705) and the INSERM, France.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Service de Bactériologie-Virologie, Hôpital de Bicêtre, 78 rue du Général Leclerc, 94275 Le Kremlin-Bicêtre Cedex, France. Phone: 33-1-45-21-36-32. Fax: 33-1-45-21-63-40. E-mail:
nordmann.patrice{at}bct.aphp.fr 
Published ahead of print on 9 January 2009. 

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Journal of Bacteriology, April 2009, p. 2414-2418, Vol. 191, No. 7
0021-9193/09/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.01258-08
Copyright © 2009, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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