Gene replacement in Mycobacterium chelonae: application to the construction of porin knock-out mutants.

Mycobacterium chelonae is a rapidly growing mycobacterial opportunistic pathogen closely related to Mycobacterium abscessus that causes cornea, skin and soft tissue infections in humans. Although M. chelonae and the emerging mycobacterial pathogen M. abscessus have long been considered to belong to...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Vinicius Calado Nogueira de Moura, Sara Gibbs, Mary Jackson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3989263?pdf=render
id doaj-7edc0e194c2f4694ab175cb82292d3a5
record_format Article
spelling doaj-7edc0e194c2f4694ab175cb82292d3a52020-11-25T01:55:53ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0194e9495110.1371/journal.pone.0094951Gene replacement in Mycobacterium chelonae: application to the construction of porin knock-out mutants.Vinicius Calado Nogueira de MouraSara GibbsMary JacksonMycobacterium chelonae is a rapidly growing mycobacterial opportunistic pathogen closely related to Mycobacterium abscessus that causes cornea, skin and soft tissue infections in humans. Although M. chelonae and the emerging mycobacterial pathogen M. abscessus have long been considered to belong to the same species, these two microorganisms considerably differ in terms of optimum growth temperature, drug susceptibility, pathogenicity and the types of infection they cause. The whole genome sequencing of clinical isolates of M. chelonae and M. abscessus is opening the way to comparative studies aimed at understanding the biology of these pathogens and elucidating the molecular bases of their pathogenicity and biocide resistance. Key to the validation of the numerous hypotheses that this approach will raise, however, is the availability of genetic tools allowing for the expression and targeted mutagenesis of genes in these species. While homologous recombination systems have recently been described for M. abscessus, genetic tools are lacking for M. chelonae. We here show that two different allelic replacement methods, one based on mycobacteriophage-encoded recombinases and the other on a temperature-sensitive plasmid harboring the counterselectable marker sacB, can be used to efficiently disrupt genes in this species. Knock-out mutants for each of the three porin genes of M. chelonae ATCC 35752 were constructed using both methodologies, one of which displays a significantly reduced glucose uptake rate consistent with decreased porin expression.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3989263?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Vinicius Calado Nogueira de Moura
Sara Gibbs
Mary Jackson
spellingShingle Vinicius Calado Nogueira de Moura
Sara Gibbs
Mary Jackson
Gene replacement in Mycobacterium chelonae: application to the construction of porin knock-out mutants.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Vinicius Calado Nogueira de Moura
Sara Gibbs
Mary Jackson
author_sort Vinicius Calado Nogueira de Moura
title Gene replacement in Mycobacterium chelonae: application to the construction of porin knock-out mutants.
title_short Gene replacement in Mycobacterium chelonae: application to the construction of porin knock-out mutants.
title_full Gene replacement in Mycobacterium chelonae: application to the construction of porin knock-out mutants.
title_fullStr Gene replacement in Mycobacterium chelonae: application to the construction of porin knock-out mutants.
title_full_unstemmed Gene replacement in Mycobacterium chelonae: application to the construction of porin knock-out mutants.
title_sort gene replacement in mycobacterium chelonae: application to the construction of porin knock-out mutants.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Mycobacterium chelonae is a rapidly growing mycobacterial opportunistic pathogen closely related to Mycobacterium abscessus that causes cornea, skin and soft tissue infections in humans. Although M. chelonae and the emerging mycobacterial pathogen M. abscessus have long been considered to belong to the same species, these two microorganisms considerably differ in terms of optimum growth temperature, drug susceptibility, pathogenicity and the types of infection they cause. The whole genome sequencing of clinical isolates of M. chelonae and M. abscessus is opening the way to comparative studies aimed at understanding the biology of these pathogens and elucidating the molecular bases of their pathogenicity and biocide resistance. Key to the validation of the numerous hypotheses that this approach will raise, however, is the availability of genetic tools allowing for the expression and targeted mutagenesis of genes in these species. While homologous recombination systems have recently been described for M. abscessus, genetic tools are lacking for M. chelonae. We here show that two different allelic replacement methods, one based on mycobacteriophage-encoded recombinases and the other on a temperature-sensitive plasmid harboring the counterselectable marker sacB, can be used to efficiently disrupt genes in this species. Knock-out mutants for each of the three porin genes of M. chelonae ATCC 35752 were constructed using both methodologies, one of which displays a significantly reduced glucose uptake rate consistent with decreased porin expression.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3989263?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT viniciuscaladonogueirademoura genereplacementinmycobacteriumchelonaeapplicationtotheconstructionofporinknockoutmutants
AT saragibbs genereplacementinmycobacteriumchelonaeapplicationtotheconstructionofporinknockoutmutants
AT maryjackson genereplacementinmycobacteriumchelonaeapplicationtotheconstructionofporinknockoutmutants
_version_ 1724982778198491136