Litcius/Paper detail

Inducible transposon mutagenesis identifies bacterial fitness determinants during infection in mice

David W. Basta, Ian W. Campbell, Emily Sullivan, Julia A. Hotinger, Karthik Hullahalli, Mehek Garg, Matthew K. Waldor

2025Nature Microbiology14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Transposon insertion sequencing (Tn-seq) is a powerful method for genome-scale forward genetics in bacteria. However, inefficient transposon delivery or stochastic loss of mutants due to population bottlenecks can limit its effectiveness. Here we have developed ‘InducTn-seq’, where an arabinose-inducible Tn5 transposase enables temporal control of mini-Tn5 transposition. InducTn-seq generated up to 1.2 million transposon mutants from a single colony of enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli , Salmonella typhimurium , Shigella flexneri and Citrobacter rodentium . This mutant diversity enabled more sensitive detection of subtle fitness defects and measurement of quantitative fitness effects for essential and non-essential genes. Applying InducTn-seq to C. rodentium in a mouse model of infectious colitis bypassed a highly restrictive host bottleneck, generating a diverse population of >5 × 10 5 unique transposon mutants compared to 10–10 2 recovered by traditional Tn-seq. This in vivo screen revealed that the C. rodentium type I-E CRISPR system is required to suppress a toxin otherwise activated during gut colonization. Our findings highlight the potential of InducTn-seq for genome-scale forward genetic screens in bacteria.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyTransposon mutagenesisTransposable elementSleeping Beauty transposon systemGeneticsPopulationCitrobacter rodentiumMutagenesisShigella flexneriTransposaseCRISPRBacterial genome sizeGenomeMutantEscherichia coliGeneSociologyDemographyCRISPR and Genetic EngineeringEscherichia coli research studiesBacterial Genetics and Biotechnology