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Competent but complex communication: The phenomena of pheromone-responsive plasmids

Amy J. Sterling, William J. Snelling, Patrick Naughton, Nigel G. Ternan, James Dooley

2020PLoS Pathogens40 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Enterococci are robust gram-positive bacteria that are found in a variety of surroundings and that cause a significant number of healthcare-associated infections. The genus possesses a high-efficiency pheromone-responsive plasmid (PRP) transfer system for genetic exchange that allows antimicrobial-resistance determinants to spread within bacterial populations. The pCF10 plasmid system is the best characterised, and although other PRP systems are structurally similar, they lack exact functional homologues of pCF10-encoded genes. In this review, we provide an overview of the enterococcal PRP systems, incorporating functional details for the less-well-defined systems. We catalogue the virulence-associated elements of the PRPs that have been identified to date, and we argue that this reinforces the requirement for elucidation of the less studied systems.

Topics & Concepts

PlasmidBiologyVirulenceHorizontal gene transferGeneticsPheromoneGeneBacteriaAntimicrobialComputational biologyInsertion sequenceMicrobiologyGenomeTransposable elementBacteriophages and microbial interactionsAntibiotic Resistance in BacteriaBacterial Genetics and Biotechnology
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