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Characterization of DtrJ as an IncC plasmid conjugative DNA transfer component

Steven J. Hancock, Minh‐Duy Phan, Leah W. Roberts, Thu Ngoc Minh Vu, Patrick N. A. Harris, Scott A. Beatson, Mark A. Schembri

2021Molecular Microbiology10 citationsDOI

Abstract

gene that confers resistance to last-line carbapenems and the mcr-3 gene that confers resistance to colistin. Several recent studies have improved our understanding of the basic biological mechanisms driving the success of IncC, in particular the identification of multiple novel IncC conjugation genes by transposon directed insertion-site sequencing. Here, one of these genes, dtrJ, was examined in further detail. The dtrJ gene is located in the DNA transfer locus on the IncC backbone, and quantitative reverse-transcriptase PCR analysis revealed it is transcribed in the same operon as the DNA transfer genes traI and traD (encoding the relaxase and coupling protein, respectively) and activated by the AcaDC regulatory complex. We confirmed that DtrJ is not required for pilus biogenesis or mate pair formation. Instead, DtrJ localizes to the membrane, where it interacts with the coupling protein TraD and functions as an IncC DNA transfer protein. Overall, this work has defined the role of DtrJ in DNA transfer of IncC plasmids during conjugation.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyPlasmidGeneticsGeneOperonTransposable elementBacterial conjugationDNAGenomeEscherichia coliAntibiotic Resistance in BacteriaBacterial Genetics and BiotechnologyInfections and bacterial resistance
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