We describe here three different protocols for the in vitro investigation of conjugation, transduction, and natural transformation in Staphylococcus aureus.
One important feature of the major opportunistic human pathogen Staphylococcus aureus is its extraordinary ability to rapidly acquire resistance to antibiotics. Genomic studies reveal that S. aureus carries many virulence and resistance genes located in mobile genetic elements, suggesting that horizontal gene transfer (HGT) plays a critical role in S. aureus evolution. However, a full and detailed description of the methodology used to study HGT in S. aureus is still lacking, especially regarding natural transformation, which has been recently reported in this bacterium. This work describes three protocols that are useful for the in vitro investigation of HGT in S. aureus: conjugation, phage transduction, and natural transformation. To this aim, the cfr gene (chloramphenicol/florfenicol resistance), which confers the Phenicols, Lincosamides, Oxazolidinones, Pleuromutilins, and Streptogramin A (PhLOPSA)-resistance phenotype, was used. Understanding the mechanisms through which S. aureus transfers genetic materials to other strains is essential to comprehending the rapid acquisition of resistance and helps to clarify the modes of dissemination reported in surveillance programs or to further predict the spreading mode in the future.
Staphylococcus aureus is a commensal Gram-positive bacterium that naturally inhabits the skin and nasal cavity of human beings and animals. This bacterial species is the leading cause of nosocomial infections in hospitals and healthcare settings. Moreover, its ability to develop resistance to different antimicrobial compounds has made the management of the infections caused by this bacterium into a global concern.
Two main pathways involved in the spreading of resistance phenotypes are known: the clonal dissemination of resistant genotypes and the dissemination of genetic determinants among the bacterial pool. In the case of S. aureus, different antibiotic resistance genes (as well as virulence determinants) have been found to be associated with mobile genetic elements (MGEs)1. The presence of these elements in the genome of S. aureus indicates that the acquisition and transfer of genetic material within the bacterial population could play an important role for S. aureus adaptation and evolution.
Genetic material can be exchanged through three well-known mechanisms of HGT in Gram-positive bacteria: transformation, conjugation, and phage transduction. Transformation involves the uptake of free DNA. To acquire foreign DNA, bacterial cells need to develop a special physiological phase: the competence stage. When this stage is reached, competent cells are capable of transporting DNA into the cytoplasm, acquiring new genetic determinants. In the case of S. aureus, the existence of natural transformation has been recently demonstrated2. In line with this, our group has shed light on the relevance of the expression of the SigH factor (a cryptic secondary transcription sigma factor) in the competence stage of development and on how its constitutive expression renders S. aureus capable of reaching the competence stage, which allows for the acquisition of resistant phenotypes by natural transformation2.
Conjugation is a process involving the transmission of DNA from one living cell (donor) to another (recipient). Both cells must be in direct contact, allowing the DNA to be exchanged while being protected by special structures, such as tubes or pores. The transfer of DNA by this method requires the conjugative machinery. In S. aureus, the prototype conjugative plasmid is PGO1, which harbors the conjugative operon TraA3.
Phage transduction involves the transfer of DNA from cell to cell through bacteriophage infection and implies the packing of bacterial DNA, instead of viral DNA, into the phage capsid. Most of S. aureus isolates are lysogenized by bacteriophages1. Upon stress conditions, prophages can be excised from the bacterial genome and shift to the lytic cycle.
These are the three well known mechanisms for DNA transmission in S. aureus. There are some additional transfer mechanisms, such as "pseudo-transformation"2 and phage-like systems in the transfer of pathogenicity islands4. Recently, one group reported that "nanotubes" are involved in the transfer of cellular materials (including plasmid DNA) between neighboring cells5,6, but a follow-up study has not appeared from other groups so far.
This work provides the necessary methodology to study HGT in S. aureus by addressing the three main transfer pathways: conjugation, transduction, and natural transformation. The results obtained with these methodologies were used to study the transmission of the cfr gene (chloramphenicol/florfenicol resistance) among S. aureus strains7. These three techniques are versatile tools for the investigation of MGE transmission in S. aureus.
NOTE: The strains and materials used in this work are listed in Table 1 and the Table of Materials, respectively. In the transmission experiments, N315 and COL cfr-positive derivatives were used as donors of the cfr gene (N315-45 and COL-45). These strains were previously obtained by conjugation, using as the donor a clinical cfr-positive Staphyloccocus epidermidis strain (ST2), following the standard conjugation protocol (see below). This strain harbored the cfr gene on a pSCFS7-like plasmid7.
1. Conjugation Using the Filter-mating Method
NOTE: An S. aureus N315 strain carrying the cfr gene (N315-45)7 (CmR) was used as the donor. COL8 or Mu509 strains (TetR, CmS) were used as the recipients. Double-resistant colonies (TetR, CmR) able to grow in the presence of 32 mg/L of chloramphenicol plus 8 mg/L of tetracycline were considered as putative transconjugants and were analyzed to determine the presence of cfr by colony PCR and to determine the recipient susceptibility profile.
2. Phage Transduction
NOTE: The bacteriophage MR83a belonging to the Siphoviridae family (laboratory stock) was used in the transduction experiments. N315-45 was used as the cfr donor for phage infection. N315, COL, or Mu50 strains were used as the recipients. The acquisition of cfr was determined by the ability of the recipient strain to grow in the presence of 32 mg/L chloramphenicol. Colonies growing under this condition were analyzed to determine the presence of cfr (by colony PCR) and to determine the susceptibility profile to rule out potential contamination.
3. Natural Transformation
NOTE: The natural transformation assay in S. aureus was carried out following the method described in our previous study2. The N315 derivative, N2-2.12,7, was used as the recipient. In this strain, the sigH locus was duplicated so as to constitutively express SigH2. For detailed procedures on how to isolate SigH-expressing competence variants, please see a previous description2. If the resistance marker to be transferred is not chloramphenicol, pRIT-sigH (CmR) can be used to express SigH, as described previously2. Purified plasmid or whole DNA extract from cfr-acquired S. aureus COL-457 is used as the donor DNA for transformation.
The results represented here have been previously published (adapted from reference7 with the publisher's permission). We studied the potential transmission pathways of the cfr gene, which causes low-level linezolid resistance and the expression of the PhLOPSA-resistance phenotype14,15 in S. aureus strains, by investigating three mechanisms of HGT.
Figure 1 shows the results obtained in conjugative assays. The conjugation protocol is useful for inter-species transmission (A) as well as intra-species transmission (B), giving similar results using the same conjugative vector in different conjugative donors. The efficiency of conjugation is calculated as the Nº of transconjugants (colony-forming units, or CFU/ml)/Nº of recipient cells (CFU/ml). The obtained frequencies ranged from 1 x 10-6 to 1 x 10-5, with similar values using S. epidermidis or S. aureus as the donor.
The results are summarized in Table 2. cfr-acquired S. aureus were able to further transfer the cfr gene to other S. aureus strains by conjugation as well as by phage transduction. However, the results suggest the absence of natural transformation for cfr transmission, although it was detected for a different resistance marker (tetM gene on the pHY300 plasmid).
Figure 1: Representation of recipient and transconjugant CFUs obtained in conjugative assays. The clear bars represent the total recipient strains isolated after 18-24 hr of culture in selective media for recipient strains. The filled bars represent the total double-resistant strains obtained after 18-24 hr of culture in selective media for transconjugant strains. (A) Inter-species conjugative assay. Staphylococcus epidermidis (SE45) was used as the cfr donor, and the Staphylococcus aureus N315 strain was used as the recipient. The N315-45 transconjugant strain harbored the cfr gene inserted in a pSCFS7-like plasmid. This strain was used as the source of cfr in the MRSA-to-MRSA transmission assays. (B) MRSA-to-MRSA conjugative experiments. The previously obtained N315-45 was used as the donor, and the COL or Mu50 strains were used as the recipients. The average values of two independent experiments are shown with the standard deviation (SD). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Strain name | Description | Reference source |
Bacterial strains | ||
SE45 | Clinical isolatated S. epidermidis | 7 |
N315 | pre-MRSA, KmR, ErmR | 9 |
COL | MRSA, carrying tetracycline resistance gene on pT181 plasmid | 8 |
Mu50 | MRSA, VISA | 9 |
N315-45 | derivative of N315, carrying cfr gene on a pSCFS7-like plasmid obtained from S. epidermidis by conjugation | 7 |
COL-45 | derivative of COL, carrying cfr gene on a pSCFS7-like plasmid obtained from S. epidermidis by conjugation | 7 |
RN4220-45 | derivative of RN4220, carrying cfr gene on a pSCFS7-like plasmid obtained from S. epidermidis by conjugation | 7 |
N2-2.1 | SigH active cell derived from N315, allowing cell natural competence for transformation | 7 |
E. coli HST04 dam-/dcm- pHY300 | E. coli HST04 dam-/dcm- (Takara) carrying tetracycline resistance pHY300 plasmid | 11 |
Bacteriophages | ||
MR83a | Siphoviridae family | Laboratory stock |
MR83-45 | phage MR83a packing a pSCFS7-like plasmid carrying cfr gene after infection into N315-45 | This study |
Table 1: List of strains used in this work.
HTG | Donor | Recipient | Frequency |
Conjugation | N315-45 | COL | 1.00 x 10-6 |
N315-45 | MU50 | 1.29 x 10-5 | |
Transduction | N315-45 | COL | 1.00 x 10-11 |
N315-45 | MU50 | 3.68 x 10-10 | |
N315-45 | N315 | 6.88 x 10-10 | |
Transformation | Plasmids (COL-45) | N2-2.1 | ULD |
Whole DNA (COL-45) | N2-2.1 | ULD | |
pHY300 (control) | N2-2.1 | 6.52 x 10-10 |
Table 2: HTG frequencies of cfr gene transmission obtained in MRSA-to-MRSA experiments. Conjugative transmission was evaluated using the N315 cfr-positive derivative (N315-45) as the donor. The frequency of transmission in these experiments is expressed as the Nº of transconjugants/recipient cells. Transduction was evaluated using the transducing phage MR83a, amplified from the N315-45 strain. The transduction frequency was calculated as the Nº of transductants/pfu. Transformation assays were performed using purified DNA (plasmid or whole cellular DNA) as donors. The transformation frequency was calculated as the number of transformants/recipient cells. ULD: under limit detection.
This work describes the three major methods to study the HGT of genetic determinants in S. aureus. Although transduction and conjugation have been studied for decades, the existence of natural transformation was only recently recognized2. Thus, S. aureus is equipped with all of the three major modes of HGT, and testing all of them is required to clarify the possible dissemination pathways of genetic determinants. The aim of this work is to compile complete protocols and to provide practical information on the methodologies used in a previously published work7. Although conjugation and transduction protocols are available, this is the first paper in which a detailed transformation protocol is described.
Conjugation using the filter-mating method is a simple technique and can be applied to the study of conjugative transfer in different bacterial species7,10. By using the standardized inocula, recipient counts after 18-24 hr reach a value of ~109 CFU/mL. Transconjugant counts are variable, and values show strong strain-to-strain dependence, but typically, a transconjugant range from 102 to 105 was obtained when the conjugation results were positive. Using the protocol provided here, the limit of detection achieved was <10 transconjugants/mL. This limit can be optimized by concentrating the filter suspension.
The natural transformation protocol described here was established in S. aureus N315-derivate strains. The use of CS2 medium is critical for transformation, since the transformation is undetectable in other standard laboratory media, such as TSB and BHI13.
The use of long-term stored plasmids (e.g., pT181 and pHY300) as the donor resulted in about a 10- to 50-fold reduced frequency (data not shown), suggesting that DNA quality could affect the transformation frequency. It is known that nicked plasmids are not suitable for natural transformation in B. subtilis16.
DNA obtained from both S. aureus and E. coli can be used as the donor in natural transformation assays, suggesting that a restriction barrier does not inhibit the natural transformation. We also observed the same transformation frequency between the DNA prepared from E. coli HST04 (dam–/dcm–) lacking the DNA methylase genes and from JM109, supporting the idea that methylation status does not affect the transformation frequency.
It should be noted that the transformation frequency detected by using this protocol was low (~10-9-10-10), and the transformable strains are limited to N315 derivates2. It is likely that the transformation efficiency in S. aureus could be strain-specific, as has also been reported in other transformable bacteria15,16,17. Further studies are in progress to improve the transformation efficiency; this will be described elsewhere.
Phage transduction seems to be the most prevalent HGT mechanism in S. aureus because most S. aureus isolates are lysogenized by bacteriophages18. The infection ability of the transducing phage depends on host susceptibility and needs to be checked by plaque assay. Another limitation of phage transduction is the size of the DNA. Small DNA can be efficiently transferred, but DNA fragments larger than 45 kb cannot be packed in the staphylococcal phage head19. However, a novel giant staphylococcal phage has recently been isolated from the environment, and itcould conceivably be able to transfer larger DNA fragments20.
The plaque assay method described in this work is easier than the conventional protocol, where top-agar is used. However, the present method requires that the bacterial cells are spread evenly in order to detect tiny plaques generated on the surface. To achieve the completely even spreading, we recommend spreading enough volume of the bacterial suspension on the agar surface, stopping when the liquid evenly covers the agar surface. Then, dry the plates in air-flow in a clean bench. If it is necessary to avoid the lysogenization of the transducing phage, a low multiplicity of infection is recommended (the MOI should not exceed 1). Lysogenized cells can be distinguished by their diminished susceptibility to phage in the plaque assay.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
This work was partly supported by Takeda Science Foundation, Pfizer Academic Contribution and JSPS Postdoctoral Fellowship for Foreign Researchers (FC).
Tryptic Soy Broth (TSB) | Becton Dickinson | 211825 | |
Brain Heart Infusion (BHI) | Becton Dickinson | 211059 | |
Nutrient Broth No. 2 | Oxoid | CM0067 | |
Sheep blood agar | Eiken Chemical Co.,Ltd. | E-MR96 | Tryptic soy agar added with 5% (v/v) sheep blood according to the manufacturer. |
Agar powder | Wako Pure Chemical Industries | 010-08725 | |
Sodium citrate (Trisodium citrate dihydrate) | Wako Pure Chemical Industries | 191-01785 | |
Cellulose Ester Gridded 0.45 μL HAWG filter | Merck Milipore | HAWG 02500 | |
QIAfilter Plasmid Midi kit | QIAGEN | 12243 |