Acinetobacter baumannii is a Gram-negative bacterial pathogen notorious for causing serious nosocomial infections that resist antibiotic therapy. Research to identify factors responsible for the pathogen's success has been limited by the resources available for genome-scale experimental studies. This report describes the development of several such resources for A. baumannii strain AB5075, a recently characterized wound isolate that is multidrug resistant and displays robust virulence in animal models. We report the completion and annotation of the genome sequence, the construction of a comprehensive ordered transposon mutant library, the extension of high-coverage transposon mutant pool sequencing (Tn-seq) to the strain, and the identification of the genes essential for growth on nutrient-rich agar. These resources should facilitate large-scale genetic analysis of virulence, resistance, and other clinically relevant traits that make A. baumannii a formidable public health threat. IMPORTANCEAcinetobacter baumannii is one of six bacterial pathogens primarily responsible for antibiotic-resistant infections that have become the scourge of health care facilities worldwide. Eliminating such infections requires a deeper understanding of the factors that enable the pathogen to persist in hospital environments, establish infections, and resist antibiotics. We present a set of resources that should accelerate genome-scale genetic characterization of these traits for a reference isolate of A. baumannii that is highly virulent and representative of current outbreak strains.A cinetobacter baumannii is a Gram-negative opportunistic pathogen that causes infections with serious morbidity and mortality and is one of a group of six pathogens responsible for most multidrug-resistant (MDR) nosocomial infections (the ESKAPE pathogens, i.e., Enterococcus faecium, Staphylococcus aureus, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Acinetobacter baumannii, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Enterobacter species) (1, 2). The pathogen is infamous for its ability to persist in hospital settings, a feature that reflects its capacity for long-term survival on abiotic surfaces through resistance to desiccation and disinfectants (3).Genomic and molecular epidemiological studies of A. baumannii isolates have helped define the pathogen's global population structure, its antibiotic resistance gene repertoire, the size and content of its pangenome, and phylogenetic relationships among outbreak strains (3-6). Three primary clonal lineages (GC1 to GC3) appear responsible for the majority of hospital outbreaks globally (7). Although these lineages display restricted genetic diversity among core genes (7), the species' genome is actually quite dynamic. Strains display striking variability in accessory gene content (5, 8), including antibiotic resistance genes (9), even among related isolates of a single outbreak (10). This genomic variability presumably reflects the actions of transmissible plasmids, insertion elements, phage, integrons, natural transformation, and reco...
Most infants with cystic fibrosis (CF) have pancreatic exocrine insufficiency that results in nutrient malabsorption and requires oral pancreatic enzyme replacement. Newborn screening for CF has enabled earlier diagnosis, nutritional intervention, and enzyme replacement for these infants, allowing most infants with CF to achieve their weight goals by 12 months of age 1 . Nevertheless, most infants with CF continue to have poor linear growth during their first year of life 1 . Although this early linear growth failure is associated with worse long-term respiratory function and survival 2 , 3 , the determinants of stature in infants with CF have not been defined. Several characteristics of the CF gastrointestinal (GI) tract, including inflammation, maldigestion and malabsorption, could promote intestinal dysbiosis 4 , 5 . As GI microbiome activities are known to affect endocrine functions 6 , 7 , the intestinal microbiome of infants with CF might also impact growth. We identified an early, progressive fecal dysbiosis that distinguished infants with CF and low length from infants with CF and normal length. This dysbiosis included altered abundances of taxa that perform functions important for GI health, nutrient harvest, and growth hormone signaling, including decreased Bacteroidetes and increased Proteobacteria. Thus, the GI microbiota represent a potential therapeutic target to correct linear growth defects among infants with CF.
We previously reported that lagging-strand genes accumulate mutations faster than those encoded on the leading strand in Bacillus subtilis. Although we proposed that orientation-specific encounters between replication and transcription underlie this phenomenon, the mechanism leading to the increased mutagenesis of lagging-strand genes remained unknown. Here, we report that the transcription-dependent and orientation-specific differences in mutation rates of genes require the B. subtilis Y-family polymerase, PolY1 (yqjH). We find that without PolY1, association of the replicative helicase, DnaC, and the recombination protein, RecA, with lagging-strand genes increases in a transcription-dependent manner. These data suggest that PolY1 promotes efficient replisome progression through lagging-strand genes, thereby reducing potentially detrimental breaks and single-stranded DNA at these loci. Y-family polymerases can alleviate potential obstacles to replisome progression by facilitating DNA lesion bypass, extension of D-loops, or excision repair. We find that the nucleotide excision repair (NER) proteins UvrA, UvrB, and UvrC, but not RecA, are required for transcription-dependent asymmetry in mutation rates of genes in the two orientations. Furthermore, we find that the transcription-coupling repair factor Mfd functions in the same pathway as PolY1 and is also required for increased mutagenesis of laggingstrand genes. Experimental and SNP analyses of B. subtilis genomes show mutational footprints consistent with these findings. We propose that the interplay between replication and transcription increases lesion susceptibility of, specifically, lagging-strand genes, activating an Mfd-dependent error-prone NER mechanism. We propose that this process, at least partially, underlies the accelerated evolution of lagging-strand genes.replication conflicts | transcription orientation | Y-family polymerases | excision repair | TCR
SUMMARYMetagenomic sequencing is a promising approach for identifying and characterizing organisms and their functional characteristics in complex, polymicrobial infections, such as airway infections in people with cystic fibrosis. These analyses are often hampered, however, by overwhelming quantities of human DNA, yielding only a small proportion of microbial reads for analysis. In addition, many abundant microbes in respiratory samples can produce large quantities of extracellular bacterial DNA originating either from biofilms or dead cells. We describe a method for simultaneously depleting DNA from intact human cells and extracellular DNA (human and bacterial) in sputum, using selective lysis of eukaryotic cells and endonuclease digestion. We show that this method increases microbial sequencing depth and, consequently, both the number of taxa detected and coverage of individual genes such as those involved in antibiotic resistance. This finding underscores the substantial impact of DNA from sources other than live bacteria in micro-biological analyses of complex, chronic infection specimens.
We constructed a near-saturation transposon mutant library for Burkholderia thailandensis, a low-virulence surrogate for the causative agent of melioidosis (Burkholderia pseudomallei). A primary set of nearly 42,000 unique mutants (~7.5 mutants/gene) was generated using transposon Tn5 derivatives. The strains carry insertions in 87% of the predicted protein-coding genes of the organism, corresponding to nearly all of those nonessential for growth on nutrient agar. To achieve high genome coverage, we developed procedures for efficient sequence identification of insertions in extremely GC-rich regions of DNA. To facilitate strain distribution, we created a secondary library with two mutants per gene for which most transposon locations had been confirmed by resequencing. A map of mutations in the two-allele library and procedures for obtaining strains can be found at and . The library should facilitate comprehensive mutant screens and serve as a source of strains to test predicted genotype-phenotype associations.
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