An Effective Counterselection System for Listeria monocytogenes and Its Use To Characterize the Monocin Genomic Region of Strain 10403S.

Appl Environ Microbiol

Department of Molecular Microbiology and Biotechnology, George S. Wise Faculty of Life Sciences, Tel Aviv University, Ramat Aviv, Tel Aviv, Israel

Published: March 2017

Construction of mutants by allelic exchange has been laborious and time-consuming due to lack of proficient selection markers for the final recombination event, that is, a marker conveying substance sensitivity to the bacteria bearing it, enabling the exclusion of merodiploids and selection for plasmid loss. In order to address this issue, we engineered a counterselection marker based on a mutated phenylalanyl-tRNA synthetase gene (). This mutation renders the phenylalanine-binding site of the enzyme more promiscuous and allows the binding of the toxic -chloro-phenylalanine analog (-Cl-phe) as a substrate. When is introduced into and highly expressed under control of a constitutively active promoter, the bacteria become sensitive to -Cl-phe supplemented in the medium. This enabled us to utilize as a negative selection marker and generate a novel, efficient suicide vector for allelic exchange in We used this vector to investigate the monocin genomic region in strain 10403S by constructing deletion mutants of the region. We have found this region to be active and to cause bacterial lysis upon mitomycin C treatment. The future applications of such an effective counterselection system, which does not require any background genomic alterations, are vast, as it can be modularly used in various selection systems (e.g., genetic screens). We expect this counterselection marker to be a valuable genetic tool in research on is an opportunistic intracellular pathogen and a widely studied model organism. An efficient counterselection marker is a long-standing need in research for improving the ability to design and perform various genetic manipulations and screening systems for different purposes. We report the construction and utilization of an efficient suicide vector for allelic exchange which can be conjugated, leaves no marker in the bacterial chromosome, and does not require the use of sometimes leaky inducible promoters. This highly efficient genome editing tool for will allow for rapid sequential mutagenesis, introduction of point mutations, and design of screening systems. We anticipate that it will be extensively used by the research community and yield novel insights into the diverse fields studied using this model organism.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5335520PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/AEM.02927-16DOI Listing

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