Litcius/Paper detail

The expression of integron arrays is shaped by the translation rate of cassettes

André Carvalho, Alberto Hipólito, Filipa Trigo da Roza, Lucía García-Pastor, Ester Vergara, Aránzazu Buendía, Teresa García‐Seco, José Antonio Escudero

2024Nature Communications11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Integrons are key elements in the rise and spread of multidrug resistance in Gram-negative bacteria. These genetic platforms capture cassettes containing promoterless genes and stockpile them in arrays of variable length. In the current integron model, expression of cassettes is granted by the Pc promoter in the platform and is assumed to decrease as a function of its distance. Here we explored this model using a large collection of 136 antibiotic resistance cassettes and show the effect of distance is in fact negligible. Instead, cassettes have a strong impact in the expression of downstream genes because their translation rate affects the stability of the whole polycistronic mRNA molecule. Hence, cassettes with reduced translation rates decrease the expression and resistance phenotype of cassettes downstream. Our data puts forward an integron model in which expression is contingent on the translation of cassettes upstream, rather than on the distance to the Pc. Authors explore an integron model to show that expression of a cassette is strongly determined by the identity of the cassette that precedes it.

Topics & Concepts

Translation (biology)IntegronExpression (computer science)BiologyComputational biologyComputer scienceGeneticsMessenger RNAEscherichia coliGeneProgramming languageRNA and protein synthesis mechanismsRNA Research and SplicingBacterial Genetics and Biotechnology