Abstract

Streptococcus pneumoniae is one of the world's leading bacterial pathogens, causing pneumonia, septicemia, and meningitis. In recent years, it has been shown that genetic rearrangements in a type I restriction-modification system (SpnIII) can impact colony morphology and gene expression. By generating a large panel of mutant strains, we have confirmed a previously reported result that the CreX (also known as IvrR and PsrA) recombinase found within the locus is not essential for hsdS inversions. In addition, mutants of homologous recombination pathways also undergo hsdS inversions. In this work, we have shown that these genetic rearrangements, which result in different patterns of genome methylation, occur across a wide variety of serotypes and sequence types, including two strains (a 19F and a 6B strain) naturally lacking CreX. Our gene expression analysis, by transcriptome sequencing (RNAseq), confirms that the level of creX expression is impacted by these genomic rearrangements. In addition, we have shown that the frequency of hsdS recombination is temperature dependent. Most importantly, we have demonstrated that the other known pneumococcal site-specific recombinases XerD, XerS, and SPD_0921 are not involved in spnIII recombination, suggesting that a currently unknown mechanism is responsible for the recombination of these phase-variable type I systems.IMPORTANCEStreptococcus pneumoniae is a leading cause of pneumonia, septicemia, and meningitis. The discovery that genetic rearrangements in a type I restriction-modification locus can impact gene regulation and colony morphology led to a new understanding of how this pathogen switches from harmless colonizer to invasive pathogen. These rearrangements, which alter the DNA specificity of the type I restriction-modification enzyme, occur across many different pneumococcal serotypes and sequence types and in the absence of all known pneumococcal site-specific recombinases. This finding suggests that this is a truly global mechanism of pneumococcal gene regulation and the need for further investigation of mechanisms of site-specific recombination.

Highlights

  • Streptococcus pneumoniae is one of the world’s leading bacterial pathogens, causing pneumonia, septicemia, and meningitis

  • We show that target recognition domains (TRDs) switching is independent of the universal recombinase RecA but is partially controlled by the site-specific recombinase CreX, which is encoded within the spnIII locus

  • TRD shuffling is dependent on three inverted repeat (IR) within the locus (Fig. 1B) and a on a core conserved target sequence of 10 bp (ATTATGGGAA) found within all IRs

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Summary

Introduction

Streptococcus pneumoniae is one of the world’s leading bacterial pathogens, causing pneumonia, septicemia, and meningitis. It has been shown that genetic rearrangements in a type I restriction-modification system (SpnIII) can impact colony morphology and gene expression. The discovery that genetic rearrangements in a type I restriction-modification locus can impact gene regulation and colony morphology led to a new understanding of how this pathogen switches from harmless colonizer to invasive pathogen. These rearrangements, which alter the DNA specificity of the type I restriction-modification enzyme, occur across many different pneumococcal serotypes and sequence types and in the absence of all known pneumococcal sitespecific recombinases. SpnIII PV has a significant potential to impact the colonization or invasion phenotype during a clonal pneumococcal infection

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