Here we present a protocol for the use of pre-existing antibiotic resistance-cassette deletion constructs as a basis for making deletion mutants in other E. coli strains. Such deletion mutations can be mobilized and inserted into the corresponding locus of a recipient strain using P1 bacteriophage transduction.
A first approach to study the function of an unknown gene in bacteria is to create a knock-out of this gene. Here, we describe a robust and fast protocol for transferring gene deletion mutations from one Escherichia coli strain to another by using generalized transduction with the bacteriophage P1. This method requires that the mutation be selectable (e.g., based on gene disruptions using antibiotic cassette insertions). Such antibiotic cassettes can be mobilized from a donor strain and introduced into a recipient strain of interest to quickly and easily generate a gene deletion mutant. The antibiotic cassette can be designed to include flippase recognition sites that allow the excision of the cassette by a site-specific recombinase to produce a clean knock-out with only a ~100-base-pair-long scar sequence in the genome. We demonstrate the protocol by knocking out the tamA gene encoding an assembly factor involved in autotransporter biogenesis and test the effect of this knock-out on the biogenesis and function of two trimeric autotransporter adhesins. Though gene deletion by P1 transduction has its limitations, the ease and speed of its implementation make it an attractive alternative to other methods of gene deletion.
A common first approach to study the function of a gene is to perform knock-out mutagenesis and observe the resulting phenotype. This is also termed reverse genetics. The bacterium E. coli has been the workhorse of molecular biology for the last 70 years or so, due to the ease of its culturing and its amenability to genetic manipulation1. Several methods have been developed to produce gene deletions in E. coli, including marker exchange mutagenesis2,3 and, more recently, recombineering using the λ Red or Rac ET systems4,5,6.
In a widely used system, coding sequences of individual genes are replaced by an antibiotic resistance cassette that can later be excised from the chromosome5,7. The coding sequences are replaced, for instance by a kanamycin (Kan) resistance cassette, which is flanked by flippase (FLP) recognition target (FRT) sites on either side. The FRT sites are recognized by the recombinase FLP, which mediates site-specific recombination between the FRT sites leading to the deletion of the Kan cassette. In this way, a full deletion of a given gene's coding sequence can be achieved, leaving behind only a minimal scar sequence of approximately 100 base pairs (bp) (Figure 1).
Just over a decade ago, the so-called Keio collection was developed. This is a bacterial library based on a standard laboratory E. coli K12 strain, where almost all non-essential genes were individually deleted by λ Red recombination7,8. The clones within this collection each have one coding sequence replaced with an excisable Kan resistance cassette. The Keio collection has proven to be a useful tool for many applications9. One such application is the production of deletion mutants in other E. coli strains. The Kan cassette from a given deletion clone can be mobilized by generally transducing bacteriophages, such as P110,11,12,13,14. A phage stock prepared from such a strain can then be used to infect a recipient E. coli strain of interest, where at a low but reliable frequency the Kan cassette-containing region can be incorporated into the recipient genome by homologous recombination (Figure 2). Transductants can be selected for the growth on the Kan-containing medium. Following this, if removal of the antibiotic resistance cassette is desired, the FLP recombinase can be supplied to the transductant strain in trans. After curing the FLP-containing plasmid, which carries an ampicillin (Amp) resistance marker, Kan and Amp-sensitive clones are screened for, and the correct excision of the wild-type coding sequence and the Kan cassette are verified by colony PCR.
Here, a detailed protocol is presented, describing each of the steps in producing a knock-out E. coli strain based on the strategy outlined above. As an example, a deletion of the tamA gene is demonstrated. tamA encodes an outer membrane β-barrel protein that is a part of the Transport and Assembly Module (TAM), which is involved in the biogenesis of certain autotransporter proteins and pili15,16,17. This knock-out strain was then used to examine the effect of the tamA deletion on the biogenesis of two trimeric autotransporter adhesins (TAAs), the Yersinia adhesin YadA and the E. coli immunoglobulin (Ig)-binding TAA EibD18,19.
1. Strains and Plasmids
2. Preparing a Phage Lysate
3. P1 Transduction
4. Excising the Kan cassette
5. Verification of the Gene Deletion
6. Other Techniques
Generation of a tamA Knock-out of BL21ΔABCF:
The strategy outlined above has previously been used to produce a derivative strain of BL21(DE3), a standard laboratory strain used for protein production, which is optimized for outer membrane protein production and called BL21ΔABCF21. This strain lacks four genes coding for abundant outer membrane proteins and, consequently, is able to produce more heterologously expressed outer membrane proteins than the wild-type strain. To test whether the TAM is involved in TAA biogenesis, the tamA gene was deleted in this background.
A P1 lysate was prepared from the Keio collection strain JW4179, where the tamA gene (previously called yftM) coding sequence is replaced by a Kan resistance cassette. Then, a transduction experiment was performed with BL21ΔABCF as the recipient strain. Several Kan-resistant colonies were obtained, after which two were chosen for the excision of the Kan cassette. The plasmid pCP20, encoding the FLP recombinase, was introduced into these clones and, subsequently, cured by growing at 43 °C in the absence of an antibiotic selection. A number of clones were screened for sensitivity to both Amp (which is a marker of pCP20) and Kan, and several clones sensitive to both were obtained. These clones were verified by colony PCR using primers flanking the tamA coding sequence and found that the tamA gene had successfully been deleted (Figure 4).
TamA's Role in TAA Biogenesis:
TamA has been shown to be involved in the biogenesis of some classical autotransporters16 and the inverse autotransporter intimin15. To test whether TamA is important for the biogenesis of TAAs, BL21ΔABCF ΔtamA was transformed with plasmids encoding two test proteins, the Yersinia adhesin YadA and the E. coli Ig-binding protein EibD. These proteins are known to express well in E. coli and have been used as models for TAA biogenesis in earlier studies23,28.
After inducing protein production, the outer membrane fractions of the expression cultures were isolated and analyzed by SDS-PAGE. The samples were not boiled to demonstrate trimerization of the proteins. The trimers run at sizes above 100 kDa, whereas the monomers have expected sizes of 45 kDa (YadA) and 51 kDa (EibD). No major differences were observed between the expression levels in BL21ΔABCF and BL21ΔABCF ΔtamA, although YadA seems to be produced at somewhat lower levels in the ΔtamA strain (Figure 5A). However, the opposite appears to be the case for EibD.
To examine whether the lack of TamA might influence the correct folding or transport of the proteins, their ability to bind to ligands was tested. For YadA, this was accomplished by a collagen far-western blot (Figure 5B). YadA, in both strains, bound collagen at a similar level, demonstrating that the protein is correctly folded and functional. Similarly, IgG-binding activities of EibD in the two strains correlated with the expression level (Figure 4C). These results demonstrate that the deletion of tamA does not have a significant effect on TAA biogenesis, at least not for these two model TAAs.
Figure 1: Generation of knock-outs with excisable antibiotic cassettes. For producing the gene knock-outs, a gene of interest (Gene B in this example) is replaced by a Kan resistance cassette flanked by FRT sites. The FRT-Kan cassette, in turn, is flanked by short (~50 bp) stretches of sequence homologous to the upstream and downstream regions of the Gene B. The coding sequence of Gene B is exchanged for the FRT-Kan cassette by λ Red recombination. Once this is accomplished, the Kan cassette itself can be removed by introducing the FLP recombinase, which will mediate a site-specific recombination between the FRT sites. This excises the Kan cassette, leaving a minimal (~100 bp) scar sequence in the B locus. For full details, see Baba et al.7. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2: Gene deletion by P1 transduction. The donor strain (beige) carries a Kan cassette that has replaced the gene of interest (yellow) on the chromosome (blue). The donor is infected with P1 bacteriophage. The phage multiplies in the donor strain, producing a large number of progenies. Most are wild-type (red genome), but a fraction are transducing phages that have incorporated a portion of the donor strain chromosome rather than phage DNA (blue genome). A proportion of these will contain the Kan cassette (yellow genome). Eventually, the infected host cell lyses and releases the phages into the medium. These are used to prepare a lysate. In the transduction experiment, the recipient strain (light blue) is infected with the lysate prepared from the donor strain. In a minority of cases, the recipient is infected by a transducing phage carrying the Kan cassette (shown here). If the regions adjacent to the Kan cassette undergo homologous recombination, the Kan cassette is incorporated into the recipient chromosome replacing the endogenous allele, resulting in Kan-resistant clones that can be selected for. The addition of FLP recombinase on a curable plasmid excises the Kan cassette, leaving only a short scar sequence (shown here in yellow), which reverts the clone to the Kan-sensitive phenotype. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3: Examples of plates after a P1 infection. (A) This panel shows a plate with individual plaques. (B) This panel shows a semi-confluent plate. (C) This panel shows an over-infected plate, where almost all the bacteria have been lysed by phage. Some resistant colonies have grown out of the top agar layer. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 4: Deletion of the tamA coding sequence. The tamA::kan deletion allele was introduced into the strain BL21ΔABCF by P1 transduction. After the excision of the Kan cassette, a scar sequence (~100 bp) is all that remains at the tamA locus. This was verified by PCR, using primers flanking the deletion site. In BL21ΔABCF and its parent strain, BL21(DE3), the PCR gives a product the length of the tamA coding sequence (the expected size is 1.7 kilobase pairs). In BL21ΔABCF, where the Kan cassette has been excised, the product corresponds to the expected scar sequence (145 bp). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 5: Expression of TAAs by a tamA deletion strain. (A) This panel shows the SDS-PAGE of outer membranes prepared from cells expressing TAAs (YadA or EibD) and vector controls (pIBA2 and pET22). The strains are BL21ΔABCF and its derivative strain lacking TamA (ΔtamA). (B) This panel shows a collagen far-western blot of YadA samples. The YadA samples and pIBA2 controls from panel A were transferred to a PVDF membrane and incubated with collagen type I. They were then probed with an anti-collagen antibody and detected by ECL. (C) This panel shows an antibody binding assay for EibD samples. The EibD samples and pET22 controls from panel A were transferred to a PVDF membrane and incubated with an HRP-conjugated secondary antibody and then detected by ECL. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Reagent | 1x mix | 7x mix |
PCR-grade water | 17 µL | 119 µL |
10 x polymerase buffer | 2 µL | 14 µL |
10 mM deoxyribonucleotide mix | 0.4 µL | 2.8 µL |
100 µM forward primer | 0.2 µL | 1.4 µL |
100 µM reverse primer | 0.2 µL | 1.4 µL |
Taq DNA polymerase | 0.2 µL | 1.4 µL |
Total | 20 µL | 140 µL |
Table 1: Colony PCR master mix. The amount of mix depends on the number of colonies to be screened. In addition, prepare a control reaction (original recipient strain). For instance, if screening five clones, six reactions are needed, including the control. It is worth preparing an extra reaction to make sure there is enough PCR mix for all samples (repeated pipetting amplifies small pipetting errors). In this example, prepare a 7x mix (5 colonies, 1 control, and 1 extra reaction).
Step | Temperature | Time | Notes |
1. | 94 °C | 3 min | |
2. | 94 °C | 30 s | |
3. | 50 °C | 30 s | |
4. | 70 °C | 2 min | 1 min/kb to be amplified, round up |
Return to step 2 24 times | |||
5. | 70 °C | 5 min | |
6. | 12 °C | for ever | final hold |
Table 2: Colony PCR program.
Supplementary File 1: An example of colony grid. Please click here to download this file.
P1 transduction is a fast, robust, and reliable method for generating gene deletions in E. coli. This is demonstrated here by transducing a tamA deletion mutant from a Keio donor strain to a BL21-derived recipient. The major stages in the transduction process are the production of the transducing lysate, the transduction itself, the excision of the Kan resistance cassette, and the verification of the knock-out by PCR. In total, the process takes approximately 1 week and requires no molecular biology methods to be used, apart from the final PCR for the verification. Thus, P1 transduction can compete in expended effort and time with λ Red recombination and is much faster than traditional marker exchange mutagenesis.
The presented protocol is very robust and allows for modifications of many of the steps. There are, however, a few critical parameters. For P1 infections, it is necessary to add calcium ions to the medium. Calcium is needed for the adsorption of the phage to the bacteria, and failure to add sufficient calcium to the medium will significantly reduce the efficiency of the infection. Some bacterial strains such as BL21ΔABCF tend to aggregate in the presence of CaCl221. In such cases, the bacteria can be grown without CaCl2, which can be added to the suspension shortly before the infection. However, for more conventional strains, 10 mM CaCl2 can be included in the growth medium from the beginning.
Conversely, it is important to remove the free calcium from the medium after the transduction. Citrate is a chelator of calcium ions, and because these are needed for the adsorption of P1 to host cells, removing the free calcium from the medium prevents further infections. If the calcium is not removed, the phages will infect further cells throughout the culture, at best reducing the efficiency of the transduction and at worst lysing the whole culture, including the transductants.
Another critical step is culturing bacteria carrying the plasmid pCP20. pCP20 is a conditionally replicating plasmid that does not replicate at temperatures of 37 °C or higher; thus, to establish the plasmid in the cells, incubations with this plasmid must be performed at 30 °C (or lower), a temperature permissive for the replication of pCP20. For curing pCP20, a high temperature (43 °C) is used. Some strains do not grow well at this temperature; in such cases, 37 °C should suffice, although the plasmid curing will be somewhat less efficient at this temperature.
When plating bacteria to test for antibiotic sensitivity, the order of plate streaking is important. The protocol calls for clones to be streaked first on antibiotic-containing plates and finally on non-selective medium. In this way, the investigator can be sure that any lack of growth on the selective media will be due to antibiotic sensitivity and rather than to a potential lack of material transferred on the plates. Following the protocol, no growth on the LB + Kan plate validates the excision of the Kan resistance cassette; no growth on the LB + Amp plate validates the loss of the recombination plasmid pCP20; strains growing on the LB plate (which did not grow in the same streaking experiment on the selection plates) will contain the positive recombinants.
Most of the other steps allow for considerable leeway. In the protocol as presented, BL21ΔABCF is cultured at 30 °C, as this strain does not grow well at 37 °C. However, E. coli strains without growth defects may be cultured at 37 °C (except when transformed with pCP20).
The number of bacteria used for infections can be varied to some extent. The relationship between OD600 and a viable count is roughly linear between an OD600 value of 0.1 and 1.0, where the former corresponds to approximately 108 cfu/mL and the latter to ~109 cfu/mL. However, this relationship may vary to some extent depending on the strain in question, the growth medium, and other factors. It is recommended that the relationship between OD600 and the viable count should be established for each laboratory and strain, particularly for calculating MOI values. The number of bacteria used in infection experiments is not particularly critical, and 109 cfu/mL represents the early stationary phase, which is a reasonable compromise between cell density and the proportion of viable cells in the culture. If a lower number of viable bacteria are used for transduction, the number of phages simply needs to be adjusted accordingly. The MOI itself can also be varied to some extent. The protocol calls for an MOI value of 0.5, although anything between 0.1 and 0.5 should result in a good efficiency. At an MOI of 0.5, the ratio of phages to bacteria is 1:2 (i.e., half the number of phages compared to the number of bacteria). In the example in the protocol, the OD600 of the culture is 1.0, and 1 mL of the culture is used for the transduction; thus, the number of phages required is 5 x 108. An MOI value of 0.5 gives a high level of infection but reduces the number of bacteria that are doubly infected, which would reduce the efficiency of the transduction as the wild-type (infectious) phages far outnumber the transducing phages. A double infection with a transducing phage and an infectious phage would lead to cell lysis, thus eliminating this transductant from the pool of survivors. Therefore, an MOI of 0.5 should not be exceeded.
The protocol also allows for some shortcuts. Rather than preparing lysates from plates, some authors advocate preparing phage lysates in liquid medium29. This can save time as an overnight incubation step is not needed. Similarly, titrating the phage lysate might not be necessary. As noted above, the MOI is not very critical, and reasonable efficiency can be achieved by simply assuming a titer of 1010 pfu/mL for a standard lysate.
Despite the ease of the technique, P1 transduction is not universally applicable, and several conditions must be met for it to be useful. Firstly, a donor strain with a selectable knock-out allele must be available. This is usually accomplished by using a deletion where an antibiotic resistance cassette has replaced the gene of interest. The Keio collection is particularly useful in this regard, as it offers a ready-to-use library of antibiotic cassette-based gene knock-outs covering almost all non-essential genes in E. coli K12. This collection is particularly useful for knocking out conserved genes found in most E. coli strains (i.e., constituents of the E. coli core genome). For less common genes, such as virulence factors of pathogenic E. coli strains or rare metabolic pathway genes, the mutation may need to be created de novo. In such cases, P1 transduction may well not be the method of choice. In addition to essential genes, genes that are required for P1 infection, such as galU, mutations of which lead to P1 resistance30, are poor targets for a deletion by P1 transduction. Another note when using the Keio collection, specifically, is that a few strains carry a duplication of the targeted gene, where only one copy was disrupted by the Kan resistance cassette8. In such cases, the gene of interest may be essential; investigators are recommended to check updated annotations for such genes8. However, given these restraints, P1 transduction allows the deletion of most genes in laboratory E. coli strains. For example, the differences between BW25113 and BL21(DE3) are small and affect only a handful of protein-coding genes31.
Secondly, it is important to emphasize that the recipient strain must be capable of a homologous recombination for the transduction to work. A strain lacking the recombinase RecA can, therefore, not be modified by this method. This excludes all standard cloning strains, such as DH5α, HB101, TOP10, and XL-1 Blue. RecA can mediate recombinations between identical stretches as short as 8 bp; however, a longer region of high similarity will increase the probability of recombination significantly32,33. Another problem, particularly with clinical E. coli strains, is that long O-antigen chains may mask the receptor for P1, which lies in the core oligosaccharide of lipopolysaccharide34. In addition to these requirements for the recipient strain, the P1 strain used for transduction should be a vir mutant; this mutation is required for a full lytic infection35.
A third caveat of P1 transduction is that the gene to be knocked out should reside in a region with high similarity in the flanking regions between the donor and recipient strains. If there is a lack of synteny between the strains, the replacement of the target gene coding sequence with the Kan cassette may well fail, due to differences in the content of the flanking regions. Therefore, before embarking on P1-mediated gene deletion, investigators should check the sequences of the donor and recipient strains to make sure the flanking sequences are homologous. Of course, this is only possible if the strains have been sequenced. In the case of strains with an unknown sequence, P1 transduction may either fail or cause other problems, such as a gene conversion in the flanking regions. P1 can transduce approximately 90 kilobase pairs of DNA; if there are differences in the gene content in the regions around the target gene (e.g., small deletions or insertions), it is likely that these will revert to the donor sequence. This might have unintended consequences on the phenotype of the recipient strain. Therefore, where possible, the sequences of the donor and recipient around the gene of interest should always be compared prior to P1 transduction.
In conclusion, P1 transduction is a rapid way of transferring a specific gene knock-out to a number of strains once the initial knock-out mutation has been generated. Though the technique has its limitations, the ease and speed of its implementation make it an attractive alternative to other methods of gene deletion. P1 only infects E. coli, which normally restricts its use to this species. However, some variants of P1 have been developed that have a broader host range and can infect other species within the family Enterobacteriaceae, and even some other γ-proteobacterial species, albeit at reduced efficiency36,37. Even the transduction of cloned DNA from E. coli 到 Myxococcus xanthus, a δ-proteobacterium, has been reported38. In future experiments, these variants could be augmented with the vir mutation to broaden the range of recipient strains used in antibiotic cassette-based gene deletion by general transduction.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
Keio collection strains were obtained from the National BioResource Project (NIG, Japan): E. coli. We thank Dirk Linke (Department of Biosciences, University of Oslo) for his continuing support. This work was funded by the Research Council of Norway Young Researcher grant 249793 (to Jack C. Leo).
Strains | |||
E. coli BW25113 | NIG | ME6092 | Wild-type strain of Keio collection |
E. coli BL21(DE3) | Merck | 69450-3 | Expression strain |
E. coli BL21DABCF | Addgene | 102270 | Derived from BL21(DE3) |
E. coli JW4179 | NIG | JW4179-KC | tamA deletion mutant |
P1 vir | NIG | HR16 | Generally transducing bacteriophage |
Plasmids | |||
pCP20 | CGSC | 14177 | conditionally replicating plasmid with FLP |
pASK-IBA2 | IBA GmbH | 2-1301-000 | expression vector |
pEibD10 | N/A | N/A | for production of EibD; plasmid available on request |
pET22b+ | Merck | 69744-3 | expression vector |
pIBA2-YadA | N/A | N/A | for production of YadA; plasmid available on request |
Chemicals | |||
Acetic acid | ThermoFisher | 33209 | |
Agar | BD Bacto | 214010 | |
Agarose | Lonza | 50004 | |
Ampicillin | Applichem | A0839 | |
Anhydrotetracycline | Abcam | ab145350 | |
anti-collagen type I antibody COL-1 | Sigma | C2456 | |
Bovine collagen type I | Sigma | C9791 | |
Calcium chloride | Merck | 102382 | |
Chloroform | Merck | 102445 | |
Di-sodium hydrogen phosphate | VWR | 28029 | |
DNA dye | Thermo | S33102 | |
DNA molecular size marker | New England BioLabs | N3232S | |
DNase I | Sigma | DN25 | |
dNTP mix | New England Biolabs | N0447 | |
ECL HRP substrate | Advansta | K-12045 | |
EDTA | Applichem | A2937 | |
Glycerol | VWR | 24388 | |
goat anti-mouse IgG-HRP | Santa Cruz | sc-2005 | |
goat anti-rabbit IgG-HRP | Agrisera | AS10668 | |
HEPES | VWR | 30487 | |
Isopropyl thiogalactoside | VWR | 43714 | |
Kanamycin | Applichem | A1493 | |
Lysozyme | Applichem | A4972 | |
Magnesium chloride | VWR | 25108 | |
Manganese chloride | Sigma | 221279 | |
N-lauroyl sarcosine | Sigma | L9150 | |
Skim milk powder | Sigma | 70166 | |
Sodium chloride | VWR | 27808 | |
tamA forward primer | Invitrogen | N/A | Sequence 5'-GAAAAAAGGATATTCAGGAGAAAATGTG-3' |
tamA reverse primer | Invitrogen | N/A | Sequence 5'-TCATAATTCTGGCCCCAGACC-3' |
Taq DNA polymerase | New England Biolabs | M0267 | |
Tri-sodium citrate | Merck | 106448 | |
Tryptone | VWR | 84610 | |
Tween20 | Sigma | P1379 | |
Yeast extract | Merck | 103753 | |
Equipment | |||
Agarose gel electrophoresis chamber | Hoefer | SUB13 | |
Bead beater | Thermo | FP120A-115 | |
CCD camera | Kodak | 4000R | |
Electroporation cuvettes | Bio-Rad | 165-2089 | |
Electroporation unit | Bio-Rad | 1652100 | |
Gel imager | Nippon Genetics | GP-03LED | |
Incubating shaker | Infors HT | Minitron | |
Incubator | VWR | 390-0482 | |
Microcentrifuge | Eppendorf | 5415D | |
Microwave oven | Samsung | CM1099A | |
PCR machine | Biometra | Tpersonal | |
PCR strips | Axygen | PCR-0208-CP-C | |
pH meter | Hanna Instruments | HI2211-01 | |
PVDF membrane | ThermoFisher | 88518 | |
SDS-PAG electrophoresis chamber | ThermoFisher | A25977 | |
Tabletop centrifuge | Beckman Coulter | B06322 | |
Vortex mixer | Scientific Industries | SI-0236 | |
Water bath | GFL | D3006 | |
Wet transfer unit | Hoefer | TE22 |