Abstract

Plasmid-mediated horizontal gene transfer (HGT) is a major driver of genetic diversity in bacteria. We experimentally validated the function of a putative mercury resistance operon present on an abundant 8-kbp native plasmid found in groundwater samples without detectable levels of mercury. Phylogenetic analyses of the plasmid-encoded mercury reductases from the studied groundwater site show them to be distinct from those reported in proximal metal-contaminated sites. We synthesized the entire native plasmid and demonstrated that the plasmid was sufficient to confer functional mercury resistance in Escherichia coli Given the possibility that natural transformation is a prevalent HGT mechanism in the low-cell-density environments of groundwaters, we also assayed bacterial strains from this environment for competence. We used the native plasmid-encoded metal resistance to design a screen and identified 17 strains positive for natural transformation. We selected 2 of the positive strains along with a model bacterium to fully confirm HGT via natural transformation. From an ecological perspective, the role of the native plasmid population in providing advantageous traits combined with the microbiome's capacity to take up environmental DNA enables rapid adaptation to environmental stresses.IMPORTANCE Horizontal transfer of mobile genetic elements via natural transformation has been poorly understood in environmental microbes. Here, we confirm the functionality of a native plasmid-encoded mercury resistance operon in a model microbe and then query for the dissemination of this resistance trait via natural transformation into environmental bacterial isolates. We identified 17 strains including Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria to be naturally competent. These strains were able to successfully take up the plasmid DNA and obtain a clear growth advantage in the presence of mercury. Our study provides important insights into gene dissemination via natural transformation enabling rapid adaptation to dynamic stresses in groundwater environments.

Highlights

  • Plasmid-mediated horizontal gene transfer (HGT) is a major driver of genetic diversity in bacteria

  • We examined the mercury resistance genes encoded on p5343, an 8-kb native plasmid belonging to incompatibility IncA/C core gene plasmid multilocus sequence type, MOB group MOBQ, encoding genes involved in plasmid replication and mobilization

  • The transformed strains were assayed for mercury resistance at mercury chloride concentrations known to be inhibitory to E. coli [19]

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Summary

Introduction

Plasmid-mediated horizontal gene transfer (HGT) is a major driver of genetic diversity in bacteria. We confirm the functionality of a native plasmid-encoded mercury resistance operon in a model microbe and query for the dissemination of this resistance trait via natural transformation into environmental bacterial isolates. Since groundwater is a low-cell-density environment with fluctuating populations, we used natural transformation to examine the dissemination of the native plasmid-encoded metal resistance trait to bacterial isolates from the ORFRC site. Our results from these HGT assays are presented, and they reveal that natural transformation may play a critical role in the spread of resistance genes to divergent strains

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