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Plasmids Spread Very Fast in Heterogeneous Bacterial Communities
Francisco Dionisioa,b, Ivan Matica, Miroslav Radmana, Olivia R. Rodriguesb, and François Taddeiaa Faculté de Médicine Necker-Enfants Malade, INSERM U571, Université Paris V, 75730 Paris Cedex 15, France
b Instituto Gulbenkian de Ciência, Apartado 14, P-2781-901 Oeiras, Portugal
Corresponding author: Francisco Dionisio, Apartado 14, P-2781-901 Oeiras, Portugal., dionisio{at}igc.gulbenkian.pt (E-mail)
Communicating editor: H. OCHMAN
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
Conjugative plasmids can mediate gene transfer between bacterial taxa in diverse environments. The ability to donate the F-type conjugative plasmid R1 greatly varies among enteric bacteria due to the interaction of the system that represses sex-pili formations (products of finOP) of plasmids already harbored by a bacterial strain with those of the R1 plasmid. The presence of efficient donors in heterogeneous bacterial populations can accelerate plasmid transfer and can spread by several orders of magnitude. Such donors allow millions of other bacteria to acquire the plasmid in a matter of days whereas, in the absence of such strains, plasmid dissemination would take years. This "amplification effect" could have an impact on the evolution of bacterial pathogens that exist in heterogeneous bacterial communities because conjugative plasmids can carry virulence or antibiotic-resistance genes.
CONJUGATION is considered a major pathway for horizontal (or lateral) gene transfer among bacteria. Conjugation requires cell-to-cell contact and operates by DNA replication resulting in unidirectional transfer of genetic material from a donor to a recipient cell. It is mediated mainly by conjugative plasmids, although conjugative transposons are also capable of triggering the process of conjugation.
Two aspects of conjugative plasmids have contributed to their importance as mediators of DNA transfer. First, it has been observed that conjugative plasmids mediate gene transfer in various environments such as soil and rhizosphere (![]()
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200 co-inhabit on the human skin (![]()
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In spite of the plasmids' promiscuity, their ability to pass between different bacterial strains or species has been considered to be of lower efficiency than their ability to pass between similar bacteria, due to diverse barriers such as restriction systems (![]()
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We investigated the ability of different bacterial strains and species to donate plasmids because the presence of bacterial cells with high donor activity (X in Fig 1) within a heterogeneous community of bacteria might allow a localized amplification of such plasmids. Following such amplification, a massive plasmid transfer to the rest of the bacterial community is expected. If that amplification indeed happens, the heterogeneity of donor ability should positively affect the dissemination of plasmids.
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How could this amplification effect happen? Let us simplify the community to three strains: Y strain is the initial carrier of the plasmid with low transfer ability, X is the amplifier strain with high donor activity; and Z is the rest of the community. Initially, Y cells carry the plasmid but, because of their low donor ability, the plasmid does not propagate among the Z recipient cells. However, if X and Y cells coexist, Y cells could donate the plasmid to X cells where it would propagate thanks to the high donor ability of X cells. Then X cells could donate to the rest of the community (Z cells). If such a hypothesis is true, we should be able to (i) observe a huge variability of donor abilities, (ii) show that indeed the presence of amplifier cells can speed up the propagation of a plasmid, and (iii) model the observed dynamics in terms of their molecular mechanism. These predictions were fulfilled and the implications of this amplification process in heterogeneous bacterial communities are discussed here.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Strains and plasmid:
The strains used in this article were Escherichia coli Vdg380, E. coli Vdg411, E. coli Vdg435, E. coli M3, E. coli M4, E. coli M1412, E. coli C4705, E. coli C4720, E. coli C4734, E. coli K12 MG1655, Escherichia blattae ATCC29907, Escherichia fergusonii ATCC35471, and Erwinia chrysanthemi AK38644.
We used the conjugative plasmid R1, a natural plasmid that confers resistance to six antibiotics (chloramphenicol, kanamycin, ampicillin, streptomycin, spectinomycin, and sulfonamides) and that has been considered to be unable to persist as a genetic parasite (![]()
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Antibiotics:
In all experiments, the concentrations of the appropriate antibiotics in the media were 40 µg/ml of nalidixic acid, 10 µg/ml of mecillinam, 100 µg/ml of rifampicin, 30 µg/ml of fosfomycin, 100 µg/ml of kanamycin, or 30 µg/ml of chloramphenicol.
Conjugations:
All conjugations in Table 1 and Table 2 and for Fig 2, Fig 4, and Fig 5 were performed by mixing logarithmic-phase cultures in a 1:1 (donor:recipient) ratio, deposited on a 0.45-µm pore size filter (Schleicher & Schuell, Keene, NH), and incubated on prewarmed Luria-Bertani (LB) broth with agar. After 100 min at 37°, cells were resuspended in 10-2 M MgSO4 and separated by swirling with a vortex mixer. This mixture was plated on LB agar plates supplemented with the appropriate antibiotics to select for donors, recipients, or transconjugants. To select for the plasmids (donors or transconjugants), we used kanamycin and chloramphenicol. Bacterial colonies were scored after 48 hr. The E. coli strains used for intraspecies conjugation were randomly chosen from a collection of natural isolates obtained from Croatia (E. coli C4705, E. coli C4720, E. coli C4734), Mali (E. coli M3, E. coli M4, E. coli M1412), and France (E. coli Vdg380, E. coli Vdg411, E. coli Vdg435; ![]()
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Serial dilutions:
The serial dilution experiments, five of them in presence of "amplifier" cells, were done in 10 ml of liquid LB. Every day we proceeded to dilutions of 1/100 in LB. The cultures were incubated at 37° and gently shaken. The chromosomal markers of each E. coli strain were RifR for the initially plasmid-free Vdg435 strain, FosR for the initially plasmid-free amplifier M4 strain, and NalR and MecR for the donor strain of Vdg435.
Computer simulations:
Parameters used in simulations are as follows. The growth rate of plasmid-free cells was set to 1.6/hr and the fitness disadvantage of bearing the plasmid was 10% of their growth rate. We further fixed the transfer frequency between Vdg435 cells and from Vdg435 to M4 cells to 10-16. Then the transfer frequencies between M4 cells and from M4 to Vdg435 cells in the formulas (![]()
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Curing bacteria:
To determine the ideal concentration of acridine orange for plasmid curing that is known to affect the viability of these strains, E. coli K12 strain was used as the reference test by incubating it overnight at 37° in LB broth with different concentrations of acridine orange (dissolved in absolute ethanol) ranging from 100 to 500 µg/ml (![]()
Statistical analysis:
When testing for differences between means (to test the null hypothesis that means are equal), we used the two-sample t-test. When testing for differences between two variances (to test the null hypothesis that the two variances are equal), the variance ratio test (i.e., F-test) was used. When testing the null hypothesis that several mean values are equal, we used the single-factor analysis of variance (ANOVA). In all cases, we rejected the null hypothesis when P < 0.05.
| RESULTS |
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High variability of donor ability:
To test our hypothesis (Fig 1), we started by checking the diversity of enterobacterial donor ability. We measured the conjugation frequency between nine natural isolates of E. coli strains, a total of 81 conjugations (Table 1), and between strains belonging to four enterobacterial species (E. coli, E. blattae, E. fergusonii, and E. chrysanthemi; Table 2). The highest transfer frequency found between different enterobacterial species (10-1.7, from E. chrysanthemi to E. coli K12; see Table 2) is similar to the highest transfer frequency within the same species (10-1.7, between E. coli M4 cells; Table 1), showing that the plasmid transfer between different species can be as efficient as between cells of the same species. Moreover, conjugation frequencies between enterobacteria reveal an impressive diversity, ranging over more than six orders of magnitude. In particular, the range of donor ability spans several orders of magnitude, as may be seen by comparing the values found in the diagonals of Table 1 and Table 2 (values of "self-transfer"). In the following we will use the term self-transfer to refer to plasmid transfer between bacteria of the same strain, where donors and recipients differ solely by the presence of the plasmid in the former cells.
Furthermore, a strain can be a good donor to several strains. For example, the transfer from cells of the M4 strain to those of the Vdg435 strain, as well as to those of the Vdg411, M1412, C4705, or C4720 E. coli strains, is much more efficient than self-transfer between cells of these strains (Table 1). Similarly, E. chrysanthemi (strain AK38644) cells are able to transfer the plasmid to cells of E. fergusonii ATCC35471, E. coli K12, or E. blattae ATCC29907 in a more efficient way than self-transfer between cells of each of these species (Table 2).
Such large differences in donor activity among bacterial strains and species encouraged us to test the hypothesis (Fig 1) that the presence of potent donors (X) among poor donors (Y) might greatly accelerate the spread of plasmids in population Z.
Finding other candidates for the amplification effect:
Candidates for the amplification effect can be found by plotting the frequency of conjugation from
to ß vs. the frequency of self-transfer between ß-cells (Fig 2). The points above the main diagonal represent bacterial strains (or species)
and ß where the transfer from
-cells to ß-cells is more efficient than self-transfer between ß-cells. Out of the 81 experimental points (conjugations) obtained with nine E. coli strains, we found 22 pairs (>27% of the points above the main diagonal) of strains
and ß fulfilling such criterion (Fig 2A) and 6 out of 16 among the other enterobacterial species (>37% of the points in Fig 2B).
Observation of the "amplification effect":
We chose the E. coli strains M4 and Vdg435 because the frequency of conjugation from cells of strain M4 to cells of strain Vdg435 is
6800-fold higher than the conjugation frequency between Vdg435 cells. Moreover, the conjugation frequency between M4 cells is also high, allowing for plasmid amplification within the M4 population (X cells in Fig 1). E. coli Vdg435 bacterial cells bearing the R1 plasmid (Y cells) were mixed with Z cells (plasmid-free Vdg435 cells having other chromosomal markers) in a 1:1 ratio. After five serial dilutions (
33 generations), no transconjugants were observed; i.e., no detectable transfer occurred when only Y and Z cells were present. According to computer simulations of deterministic mathematical models of plasmid transfer (![]()
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In contrast, when X cells (of the strain M4 initially without plasmid) were added at the beginning of the serial dilutions, we were able to detect >106 transconjugants/ml of Z cells (and >108 transconjugants/ml of X cells) after only 2 days (Fig 3).
Resident extrachromosomal elements affect the variability of donor ability:
The best amplifier strains do not seem to be related, as the best ones belong to different species: E. coli M4 and E. chrysanthemi AK38644. If amplifier strains are not closely related, then the cause of this effect might be essentially other extrachromosomal elements already present in these natural isolates, not chromosomal genes.
If resident extrachromosomal elements are responsible for the amplification effect, then that effect should be eliminated if donor strains are previously cured. To test this hypothesis we made further experiments using four strains of E. coli (the worst donor, Vdg435; the best donor, M4; and two other strains randomly chosen from the previous set, M1412 and C4705).
Before introducing the plasmid R1 in the chosen four strains, we eliminated putative resident plasmids by growing them in the presence of acridine orange. Only then did we introduce the plasmid R1. As expected, the variance of mean donor abilities of each strain decreased significantly [P = 0.032, F(3,3) = 13.05; see Fig 4] when strains were previously cured, and the mean of their donor abilities was similar in noncured and cured strains (P = 0.816, t = 0.254, d.f. = 3; Fig 4]. Furthermore, noncured bacteria do not have similar donor abilities [ANOVA: F(3,8) = 54.4, P = 0.0000115; Fig 4], while cured bacteria have significantly similar donor abilities [ANOVA: F(3,8) = 2.41, P = 0.142; Fig 4]. This is because the average donor ability of the Vdg435 increased after being previously cured of putative resident plasmids (P = 0.009, t = 10.27, d.f. = 2; see Fig 5A and Fig B), whereas the donor ability of the M4 strain decreased when previously cured (P = 0.001, t = 26.1, d.f. = 2; Fig 5A and Fig B). Meanwhile, the donor abilities of the strains M1412 and C4705 did not change significantly after being cured (P = 0.232, t = 1.693, d.f. = 2, and P = 0.402, t = 1.054, d.f. = 2; Fig 5A and Fig B).
The finOP genes are responsible for the diversity of donor ability:
Because conjugative plasmids often carry genes whose products repress sex-pili formation, i.e., repress conjugation, and because these genes are the finO and the finP in the case of the plasmid R1, we tested the hypothesis that this effect was due to an interaction between the finOP repressor system of the R1 plasmid and those of other plasmids already present inside bacterial strains.
To test whether the genes involved in the interaction with the resident plasmids were indeed finO or finP, we carried out conjugations between the four noncured strains as before, but this time using the derepressed plasmid R1drd19, which is isogenic to R1 except for the inactivation of the finOP repressor (![]()
1000 times (three orders of magnitude) more efficient than that of the plasmid R1 (the two points on the right side in Fig 4); second, the variance of mean values of donor abilities among the four strains was much lower when the plasmid R1drd19 was used than when the plasmid R1 was used [P = 0.038, F(3,3) = 11.39; Fig 4]. In other words, because the plasmid R1drd19 has its FinOP control system inactivated, its interaction with similar systems of putative resident plasmids is eliminated, which means that the average values of donor abilities of each natural strain with the plasmid R1drd19 are significantly similar [ANOVA: F(3,8) = 1.16, P = 0.382; Fig 5C].
Finally, conjugations with the plasmid R1drd19 were made with the cured bacteria (Fig 5D). As expected, these values (Fig 5D) are higher than those with the plasmid R1 (Fig 5B) but the mean values for R1drd19 (Fig 5D) are not significantly similar [ANOVA: F(3, 8) = 11.47, P = 0.003].
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
Our results show that the amplification process can indeed be responsible for the spread of a plasmid, at least under laboratory conditions (Fig 3). Furthermore, contrary to our expectations, it is seen in Fig 2 that many strains (or species) can be amplifiers of the R1 plasmid toward the other strains: out of the 97 points representing different pairs of strains, almost 30% of them are above the main diagonal.
The amplification effect can explain some observations in nature without being necessarily the only possible explanation. For example, it has been shown by sequence analysis of F-like plasmids collected from natural isolates of E. coli and Salmonella enterica that plasmid divergence between the two species is similar to that found within species (![]()
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Because of this polymorphism of the donor ability phenotype (Table 1 and Table 2), the fitness of the plasmid is (highly) dependent on its host and on the bacteria present in that community. Therefore, if a plasmid invades a bacterial community in the presence of amplifier cells, its transfer (hence, duplication) efficiency may be several thousandfold higher than that in the absence of amplifier cells. Indeed, according to the simulations (Fig 3), the ratio of the transfer rates in the presence and absence of amplifier cells is, at least, 3 x 108. According to our experiments (Fig 4 and Fig 5), the strong difference in plasmid fitness in the two experimental situations (in the presence and in the absence of amplifier cells) is due to interactions between the FinOP repressor system of the conjugative plasmid R1 and that of other (resident) plasmids that were already present in some bacterial strains. The resident plasmids are either inhibiting the transfer of the plasmid R1 by reinforcing its FinOP expression, resulting in bad donors of the R1 plasmid, or stimulating sex-pili formation by being dominantly negative and hence stimulating the transfer of the R1 plasmid, resulting in very efficient donor strains. In the case of strains with values of donor ability similar to the average of the group, our experiments do not tell us whether they have intermediate values because the resident plasmids inflict both effects together in opposite directions; hence there is no net effect, nor any interaction of the resident plasmids with the plasmid R1 (which is similar to the case in which no resident plasmids were present).
Other authors have shown that, due to the FinOP system, sex-pili formation is repressed and that in a population of E. coli K12 cells harboring the R1 plasmid,
1/1000 cells escape from the FinOP system, initiating the process of horizontal transmission of the plasmid (![]()
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It has been proposed that repression of sex-pilus synthesis reduces the energy costs of the host because it prevents the constitutive expression of the plasmid transfer genes and lowers the risk of attack by pili-specific bacteriophages, like M13, Qß, or MS2 (ANDERSON 1968). However, in terms of evolution, this hypothesis does not explain why conjugative plasmids have evolved such repressor systems instead of simply decreasing the efficiency of sex-pili formation.
Moreover, as shown here, these systems interact with similar systems of other plasmids, resulting in a fuzzy efficiency of the system itself: in a heterogeneous community bearing different bacterial strains, conjugative plasmids will spread very fast among certain bacteria (like the M4 strain or the strain of E. chrysanthemi used here) and very slowly among other bacteria cells, but the final result is that the plasmid will be stably present within that bacterial community. In other words, our observations are consistent with selection for diversity in piliformation and hence for fuzzy repressor systems like the FinOP. A mathematical model to test this hypothesis is being analyzed and will be published elsewhere.
Bacteria-forming biofilms seem to be more prone to evade not only the immune system but also antimicrobial agents, amoebas, and bacteriophages (![]()
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In conclusion, amplifier cells are likely to facilitate the emergence of new pathogenic strains when plasmids carry virulence factors (![]()
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| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank D. Bregeon, B. R. Levin, E. P. C. Rocha, and O. Tenaillon for criticism and suggestions in the course of this work and the two anonymous reviewers for suggestions on previous versions of the manuscript. We also thank J. L. Rossignol for kindly providing the facilities of his laboratory to do part of this work. We are grateful to N. Cotte-Pattat, G. Koraimann, and B. Picard for providing the strain of E. chrysanthemi, the plasmids R1 and R1drd19, and the E. coli natural isolates strains, respectively, and to J. G. Lawrence for providing the strains of E. fergusonii and E. blattae. This work was supported by grants from the "Programme de Recherche Fondamentale en Microbiologie et Maladies Infectieuses et ParasitairesMENRT," the Ligue contre le Cancer, "Programme Environnement et SantéMATE," the Association pour la Recherche sur le Cancer. F.D. was supported by the "Programa Gulbenkian de Doutoramento" and Program PRAXIS XXI.
Manuscript received April 1, 2002; Accepted for publication September 23, 2002.
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