Described here is a method for targeted, markerless gene deletion in Chlamydia trachomatis using floxed cassette allelic exchange mutagenesis, FLAEM.
Chlamydia trachomatis is an obligate intracellular pathogen that has been historically difficult to genetically manipulate. Definitive progress in elucidating the mechanisms that C. trachomatis use to create and maintain a privileged intracellular niche has been limited due to a lack of genetic tools. Fortunately, there have recently been several new advances in genetic manipulation techniques. Among these is the development of fluorescence-reported allelic exchange mutagenesis (FRAEM). This method allows targeted gene deletion coupled with insertion of a selection cassette encoding antibiotic resistance and green fluorescent protein (GFP). Reliance on this strategy can be complicated when targeting genes within polycistronic operons due to the potential of polar effects on downstream genes. Floxed cassette allelic exchange mutagenesis (FLAEM), the protocol for which is described here, was developed to alleviate cassette-induced polar effects. FLAEM utilizes Cre-loxP genome editing to remove the selection cassette after targeted deletion by allelic exchange. The resulting strains contain markerless gene deletions of one or more coding sequences. This technique facilitates direct assessment of gene function and expands the repertoire of tools for genetic manipulation in C. trachomatis.
Chlamydia trachomatis is the leading cause of bacterial sexually transmitted disease and represents a significant burden to human health. Over 100 million people are infected every year with C. trachomatis1. Approximately 70% of the infections in women are asymptomatic despite detrimental reproductive health effects, such as pelvic inflammatory disease, ectopic pregnancy, and/or infertility. Disease sequela are directly related to immunopathology initiated by C. trachomatis infection2. An efficacious vaccine has yet to be developed; therefore, understanding the function of bacterial virulence factors and other bacterial gene products is an important and urgent research question.
As intracellular bacteria, host cell invasion, intracellular replication, release of progeny, and evasion of host immunological responses are critical processes. C. trachomatis forms a parasitophorous membrane bound vacuole, termed an inclusion, for intracellular development. Establishment of the inclusion and many other critical processes are achieved by secretion of effector proteins via a type III secretion system (T3SS)3. Elucidating the functions of these secreted effectors was limited for many years due to the genetic intractability of C. trachomatis. Unlike E. coli, many classical cloning techniques are not applicable to Chlamydia. A few major limitations involve transformation efficiency, lack of counterselection reporters such as sacB, and plasmid maintenance. Whereas E. coli plasmids can generally be maintained indefinitely with an origin of replication and appropriate selective pressure, C. trachomatis plasmids requires an additional eight open reading frames (pgp1-8) for maintenance that are found on the native pL2 plasmid within the L2 serovar4.
In recent years there have been multiple genetic tools generated that accommodate Chlamydia's unique biology, yet there are still limitations5,6,7. Chemical mutagenesis by ethyl methanesulfonate (EMS) treatment can introduce missense mutations, or (less frequently) can result in nucleotide transitions introducing a premature stop codon to yield a nonsense mutation8. Transposon insertion is efficient for gene disruption, but current technology in Chlamydia research is laborious and time-consuming9. Both EMS treatment and transposon mutagenesis techniques generate random mutations and require rigorous screening methods to isolate mutant strains. A method to disrupt genes by insertion of group II introns (e.g., TargeTron) allows for directed mutagenesis; however, this method is limited by efficiency, and the insertion site is not always properly predicted10.
Fluorescence-reported allelic exchange mutagenesis (FRAEM) is a strategy used for targeted gene deletion coupled with insertion of a selection cassette providing antibiotic resistance and a fluorescence reporter11. Yet, FRAEM is complicated by the potential of cassette-induced polar effects on downstream genes, especially when targeting genes within polycistronic operons. Floxed cassette allelic exchange mutagenesis (FLAEM) is a novel genetic approach developed to alleviate the cassette-induced polar effects previously observed with the FRAEM selection cassette12. FLAEM utilizes Cre-loxP genome editing to remove the selection cassette and restore expression of downstream genes. The selection cassette containing antibiotic resistance and green fluorescent protein (GFP) is reengineered with flanking loxP sites. These loxP sites can recombine in the presence of Cre recombinase and result in excision of the cassette from the genome13. This strategy has been shown to alleviate cassette induced polar effects when targeting tmeA for deletion12,14.
Both FRAEM and FLAEM methods utilize the same suicide vector, pSUmC 4.0, which can be conditionally maintained through inducible expression of pgp6. Expression of pgp6 has previously been shown to be necessary for plasmid retention and is therefore leveraged to control plasmid maintenance11,15. When C. trachomatis is grown in media supplemented with anhydrous tetracycline (aTc) to induce pgp6 expression, the vector is maintained. In the absence of aTc, the vector is lost. Targeted gene deletion is achieved through allelic exchange of the gene for the selection cassette. The 3 kb regions directly upstream and downstream of the targeted gene serve as homology arms for recombination. These arms are cloned into the pSUmC 4.0 vector flanking the selection cassette. Successful C. trachomatis transformation and recombination events are observed through fluorescence reporting. Expression of mCherry on the vector backbone and gfp within the selection cassette yield red and green fluorescent inclusions. Once aTc is removed from culture media, green-only inclusions indicate successful recombination events with the loss of the suicide vector and integration of the selection cassette into the bacterial genome.
FLAEM represents an extension of FRAEM via subsequent transformation of a Cre recombinase-expressing vector, pSU-Cre, into the newly created mutant strain. Cre recombinase facilitates recombination between loxP sites and excision of the selection cassette. Recombination events are indicated via fluorescence reporting. The pSU-Cre vector encodes mCherry; thus, successful transformation is indicated by addition of red fluorescence to gfp-expressing inclusions. Cultivation in the absence of selective pressure for the cassette results in Cre-mediated recombination at the loxP sites, and loss of the cassette is indicated by red-only inclusions. As with pSUmC-4.0, inducible expression of pgp6 is used to conditionally maintain pSU-Cre. Once aTc and antibiotic selection are removed, the plasmid is cured, and the resulting markerless deletion strain is nonfluorescent. This method addresses the issue of cassette-induced polar effects.
1. Design and Assembly of pSUmC-4.0 with Homology Arms Specific to the Gene of Interest
2. Transformation of C. trachomatis with pSUmC 4.0 + Homology Arms for Gene Deletion by Allelic Exchange
3. Clonal Isolation of Green-only C. trachomatis Deletion Mutant Containing the loxP Flanked Selection Cassette by Limiting Dilution
4. Transformation of C. trachomatis FRAEM Mutant with pSU-Cre to Initiate Removal of loxP Flanked Selection Cassette
The method for markerless gene deletion in C. trachomatis using FLAEM is reliant upon careful cloning and transformation techniques. Successful allelic recombination is an essential first step and requires the identification and insertion of homology arms into the pSUmC-4.0 cloning vector (Figure 1). An essential second step for markerless gene deletion is removal of the fluorescence reporter and antibiotic selection cassette by Cre-lox genome editing, represented in Figure 2. The vectors used to accomplish each of these steps are annotated in Figure 3. Figure 4 shows a schematic representation of the transformation strategy to generate a markerless deletion mutant when starting with wild-type C. trachomatis.
Representative data is shown in Figure 5 and Figure 6, in which tmeA is targeted for gene deletion. The C. trachomatis tmeA deletion strain is generated using FRAEM, and the C. trachomatis tmeA-lx strain is generated using FLAEM. Both mutant strains contain a deletion of the tmeA locus; however, tmeA-lx does not contain the selection cassette, as indicated by the absence of gfp DNA shown in Figure 5. The tmeA mutant strain has decreased expression of tmeB, shown in Figure 6 by mRNA and protein levels. When FLAEM is utilized to generate the tmeA-lx mutant strain, Figure 6 shows that expression of tmeB is restored.
Figure 1: Schematic representation for identifying 5' and 3' homology arms from genomic DNA and PCR screening for their insertion into pSUmC-4.0. (A) A gene targeted for deletion from the C. trachomatis genome is represented by the blue arrow. The 3 kb regions identified as the 5' and 3' homology arms for allelic recombination are bracketed in purple and red, respectively. (B,C) Insertion of the 5' and 3' homology arms into pSUmC-4.0 is determined by PCR screening. The Sall and Sbfl restriction enzyme sites are shown flanking the aadA (black arrow) and gfp (green arrow) selection cassette which is flanked by loxP sites (yellow squares) on the pSUmC-4.0 vector. (B) No insertion is determined by a 1 kb PCR product when 5' screening primers (purple arrow heads) are used to PCR amplify across the Sall site, or 3' screening primers (red arrow heads) are used to amplify across the SbfI site. (C) Successful insertion is determined by 3 kb PCR products under the same conditions. 5' and 3' homology arms are represented by the purple and red brackets, respectively. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2: Schematic representation of Cre-lox mediated recombination to remove the gfp-aadA selection cassette. In the presence of Cre recombinase, the loxP sites (yellow) recombine, resulting in excision of the gfp–aadA selection cassette (green and black squares). The resulting locus is shown containing one remaining loxP scar sequence. Upstream (US) and downstream (DS) regions are shown in gray. This figure has been modified from Keb et al.12. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3: Genetic organization of pSUmC-4.0 and pSU-CRE. For controllable maintenance of the vectors in C. trachomatis, pgp6 is engineered downstream of a tetracycline-inducible promoter. The remaining pgp genes are downstream of their native Chlamydial promoters, and mCherry is constitutively expressed on both vectors. (A) pSUmC-4.0 contains a cassette encoding constitutively expressed aadA and gfp genes for antibiotic and fluorescence selection capability, respectively. LoxP sites for Cre mediated recombination as well as restriction enzyme sites for the insertion of gene specific homology arms flank the selection cassette. (B) pSU-CRE contains a similar backbone to pSUmC-4.0; yet, instead of the recombination cassette, blaM and cre are constitutively expressed for antibiotic selectivity and CRE recombinase generation, respectively. These figures have been modified from Keb et al.12. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 4: Schematic representation of the FLAEM transformation strategy used to create a markerless deletion mutant. The general FLAEM method is represented here where Wild-type C. trachomatis is sequentially transformed and serially passaged to generate a markerless deletion mutant. Transformation steps are represented by the addition of small arrows, and the loss of genetic elements is represented by the subtraction of small arrows. C. trachomatis intermediates (circles) are represented with antibiotic sensitivities (penicillin-resistant or penicillin-sensitive = PenGr or PenGs; spectinomycin-resistant or spectinomycin-sensitive = Specr or Specs) and fluorescence-reporting qualities (green = gfp +, red = mCherry +, gray = no fluorescence). Schematic representations of the gene locus at each step are shown below. This figure has been modified from Keb et al.12. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 5: FRAEM and FLAEM are used to generate tmeA gene deletions. (A) FRAEM was used to generate tmeA, and FLAEM was used to generate tmeA-lx. Relative DNA copy numbers of tmeA and downstream tmeB; gfp contained on the pSUmC-4.0 selection cassette; and cre contained on pSU-CRE vector are all shown. McCoy cells infected with equal inclusion forming units of WT, L2 tmeA, or L2RiftmeA-lx C. trachomatis were harvested at 24 hpi, and DNA was extracted for qPCR. Relative copy numbers were assessed by signal normalization to chlamydial 16sRNA. ND = none detected. (B) The sequenced tmeAB locus from L2RiftmeA-lx is shown with a single remaining loxP scar sequence (underlined). The flanking regions of DNA are shown in blue, the start codons are shown in green, and the TmeA stop codon is shown in red. The non-canonical start codon for TmeB is also depicted. These figures have been modified from Keb et al.12. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 6: Excision of selection cassette using FLAEM restores expression of tmeB when targeting tmeA and does not disrupt downstream genes. (A) Relative mRNA level of C. trachomatis tmeA and tmeB mutant strains. The presence of transcripts downstream of tmeA was determined by reverse transcriptase (RT) quantitative PCR. The region immediately downstream of the tmeA/B operon encodes ct696. Total RNA was isolated at 24 hpi from McCoy cells infected at an MOI of 1 with WT, L2 tmeA, L2 tmeB, or L2RiftmeA-lx. Transcripts for tmeA, tmeB, and ct696 were detected by qRT-PCR. Signals are presented after normalization to rpoD. ND = none detected. (B) Western blot for presence of TmeA and TmeB in C. trachomatis mutant strains. Equal quantities of whole-culture material from 24 hpi cultures infected with equal inclusion forming units of WT, L2 tmeA, L2RiftmeA-lx, or L2RiftmeA-lx ptmeA were probed in immunoblots for TmeA and TmeB. Hsp60 was used as a loading control, and proteins were visualized by chemiluminescence. Figure has been modified from Keb et al.12. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
The protocol described here for the generation of markerless gene deletions in C. trachomatis by FLAEM allows targeted deletion of nonessential genes and eliminates cassette-induced polar effects. The protocol relies upon careful design of 5' and 3' homology arms inserted into the pSUmC 4.0 suicide vector, efficient transformation of C. trachomatis, and careful screening of isolated mutant strains. Successful genome engineering via this method results in bacteria that are nonfluorescent and contain a single loxP scar sequence at the site of targeted gene deletion. Furthermore, this method has the potential to be adapted for sequential targeting of genes within the same C. trachomatis strain.
Careful design of the 5' and 3' homology arms and insertion into the suicide vector is the first and most critical step of the cloning process. It has been found that 3 kb homology arms provide the most efficient allelic recombination. While insertion of these arms generates a vector that is large and sometimes difficult to work with, there has been less success with shorter arms, with ~2 kb representing a minimum for success. Utilization of the Sall and Sbfl restriction sites provides a convenient one-step construction reaction when performing DNA assembly.
Other cloning methods, such as insertion PCR, have also been effective in inserting homology arms, but they introduce greater possibility of PCR-based errors. Interestingly, it has been observed that cloning of the 5' arm is comparatively more efficient than the 3' arm. If issue arise, it is recommended to divide the DNA assembly into two reactions and construct the vector in a stepwise manner. Then, it is advised to digest the vector backbone with SbfI, insert the 3' arm first, then digest the vector with Sall and insert the 5' arm in a second DNA assembly reaction.
When amplifying PCR fragments for the homology arms, it is also recommended to use freshly purified C. trachomatis genomic DNA that has not been previously frozen. This limits the possibility of DNA shearing and increases efficiency for generating larger amplicons. If amplifying homology arms from another vector, the purified PCR product will need to be DpnI restriction enzyme treated before proceeding to DNA assembly to reduce background colonies during E. coli transformation.
Transformation is another critical step of this protocol in which issues may arise. If the transformation with pSUmC 4.0 is successful, green and red inclusions should be visible by passage #3; however, it can take several more passages before transformants become enriched. Like other mutagenesis approaches, this method is limited to targeting of nonessential genes, yet transformation should still be readily accomplished. Long-term passaging of transformants in the absence of allelic exchange, indicated by retention of red fluorescence, may indicate that deletion of the targeted gene is a lethal event.
Because transformation vectors for C. trachomatis contain the same origin of replication as the native pL2, it is not uncommon for the native plasmid to be cured after multiple (>5) passages. The pgp genes on the pSUmC vectors are in a different order as compared to the native pL2; therefore, PCR can be used to detect the presence of pL2 in an isolated strain by amplifying the region spanning pgp7–pgp8. If the native plasmid is lost in final deletion mutant, it will need to be reintroduced before conducting developmental studies. Lateral gene transfer (LGT) may be utilized to reintroduce the pL2 plasmid19.
In many cases, early deletion mutants with the selection cassette still contain the pL2 plasmid. We have utilized these strains for LGT with success to reintroduce pL2 and avoid repair of the deleted gene. LGT can also be utilized as a secondary method for transformation when introducing pSU-Cre. In some cases, LGT was more efficient than classical CaCl2 transformation. In instances where LGT is utilized to introduce pSU-Cre, it important to start with C. trachomatis that express a rpoB allele, which confers rifampin resistance prior to allelic exchange and insertion of the spectinomycin selection cassette12,19. Starting with rifampin resistant bacteria allows selection after co-culture.
FLAEM enables reverse-genetic approaches with targeted deletion of entire coding sequences, compared to other genetic methods that rely on random mutagenesis or insertion of nucleotide sequences to achieve gene disruption. FLAEM is essentially an extension of FRAEM, as it allows removal of the selection cassette and eliminates previously observed cassette-induced polar effects. This method also creates the opportunity to generate multiple gene deletions in a single C. trachomatis strain.
Multiple mutations can be generated via two different mechanisms. In the first, FLAEM can be used to generate a markerless gene mutation and sequentially used to target another gene in the same strain. The first deletion mutant can be retransformed with the pSUmC 4.0 vector containing homology arms specific for secondary gene of interest. In this case, the protocol should be repeated in the same manner as the first deletion and repeated multiple times to target genes sequentially. In the second mechanism, the markerless deletion mutant isolated after FLAEM can be co-infected with a deletion mutant that still contains a selection cassette. Through LGT, the second deletion is acquired and can be selected for. When using this approach, additional mutations are limited by the number of unique selection cassettes left in the genome. Commonly used antibiotics used as selective pressure during transformation are limited for C. trachomatis, but they do include penicillin, chloramphenicol, and spectinomycin. Removing the selection cassette by Cre-loxP genome editing reduces the need to use multiple antibiotics for selective pressure. Deleting multiple gene sequences at the same time is beneficial when studying proteins with related functions or biological processes that may have multiple key players.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
This work was supported by Public Health Service grants from the National Institute of Health, NIAID (grants A1065530 and Al124649), to K.A. Fields.
Agarose | KSE Scientific | BMK-A1705 | Molecular Biology Grade |
Anhydrotetracycline hydrochloride | ACROS Organics | 233131000 | |
CaCl2 Buffer | 10 mM Tris pH 7.4, 50 mM Calcium Chloride Dihydrate | ||
Calcium Chloride Dihydrate | Sigma | C7902-500G | Suitable for cell culture |
Cycloheximide | Sigma | 7698-1G | |
dam–/dcm– Competent E. coli | New England BioLabs | C2925H | |
DMSO | ATCC | 4-X | Sterile filtered cell culture tested |
Glutamic acid | Sigma | G8415-100G | L-Glutamic acid |
Growth Media #1 | RPMI 1640 media supplemented with 10 % (vol/vol) heat-inactivated fetal bovine serum (FBS). | ||
Growth Media #2 | RPMI 1640 media supplemented with 10 % (vol/vol) heat-inactivated fetal bovine serum (FBS) and 1 µg/mL cycloheximide | ||
Hanks' Balanced Salt Solution (HBSS) (1x) | Gibco | 24020-117 | |
Heat Inactivated Fetal Bovine Serum Qualified One Shot (FBS) | Gibco | A38402-02 | |
McCoy Cells | ATCC | CRL-1696 | |
Monarch Plasmid Miniprep Kit | New England BioLabs | T1010S | Small scale DNA purification |
NaH2PO4 | Sigma | S3139-250G | Sodium phosphate monobasic |
Na2HPO4 | Sigma | S5136-500G | Sodium phosphate dibasic |
NEB 10-beta Electrocompetent E. coli Cells | New England BioLabs | C3020K | |
NEBuilder HiFi DNA assembly Cloning Kit | New England BioLabs | E5520S | Gibson Assembly Kit |
Penicillin G sodium salt | Sigma | P3032-10MU | Bioreagent suitable for cell culture |
QIAGEN Plasmid Maxi Kit | QIAGEN | 12162 | Large scale DNA purification |
Q5 Hot Start High-Fidelity DNA Polymerase | New England BioLabs | M0515 | Fragment PCR Polymerase |
RPMI 1640 Medium (1x) | Gibco | 11875-093 | Containing 2mM L-glutamine |
Sall-HF | New England BioLabs | R3138S | |
Sbfl-HF | New England BioLabs | R3642S | |
Selection Media #1 | RMPI 10 % FBS, 1 µg/mL cycloheximide, 500 µg/mL spectinomycin, and 50 ng/mL anhydrous tetracycline dissolved in DMSO | ||
Selection Media #2 | RMPI 10 % FBS, 1 µg/mL cycloheximide, 500 µg/mL spectinomycin | ||
Selection Media #3 | RPMI 10 % FBS, 1 µg/mL cycloheximide, 50 ng/mL aTc, and 0.6 µg/mL penicillin | ||
Sodium Acetate Buffer Solution | Sigma | S7899-100ML | 3M |
SOC Outgrowth Medium | New England BioLabs | B9020SVIAL | |
Spectinomycin dihydrochloride pentahydrate, Cell Culture Grade | Alfa Aesar | J61820 | |
Sucrose | Sigma | S1888-1KG | Bioreagent suitable for cell culture |
Sucrose-Phosphate-Glutamate Buffer (SPG) | 37.5g sucrose, 1.25 g Na2HPO4, 0.18 g NaH2PO4, 0.36 glutamic acid for 500 ml tissue culture grade water | ||
Tris | AMRESCO | 0497-5KG | Ultrapure grade |
Trypsin-EDTA (1x) | Gibco | 25200-056 | 0.25% |
Water | Sigma | W3500-500ML | Sterile-filtered, BioReagent, Suitable for cell culture |