The highly heavy metal resistant strain BS1 was isolated from the Zijin gold-copper mine in China. This was of particular interest since the extensively studied, closely related strain, CH34 was shown to not be only highly heavy metal resistant but also able to reduce metal complexes and biomineralizing them into metallic nanoparticles including gold nanoparticles. After isolation, BS1 was characterized and complete genome sequenced using PacBio and compared to CH34. Many heavy metal resistance determinants were identified and shown to have wide-ranging similarities to those of CH34. However, both BS1 and CH34 displayed extensive genome plasticity, probably responsible for significant differences between those strains. BS1 was shown to contain three prophages, not present in CH34, that appear intact and might be responsible for shifting major heavy metal resistance determinants from plasmid to chromid (CHR2) in BS1. Surprisingly, the single plasmid - pBS1 (364.4 kbp) of BS1 contains only a single heavy metal resistance determinant, the determinant representing RND-type efflux system conferring resistance to cobalt, zinc and cadmium, shown here to be highly similar to that determinant located on pMOL30 in CH34. However, in BS1 another homologous determinant was identified on the chromid, most similar to the determinant from pMOL30 in CH34. Other heavy metal resistance determinants such as and determinants, located on megaplasmid pMOL28 in CH34, were shown to be adjacent to the determinant on chromid (CHR2) in BS1. Additionally, other heavy metal resistance determinants such as , , , and were located on the chromid (CHR2) and not on pBS1 in BS1. A diverse range of genomic rearrangements occurred in this strain, isolated from a habitat of constant exposure to high concentrations of copper, gold and other heavy metals. In contrast, the megaplasmid in BS1 contains mostly genes encoding unknown functions, thus might be more of an evolutionary playground where useful genes could be acquired by horizontal gene transfer and possibly reshuffled to help BS1 withstand the intense pressure of extreme concentrations of heavy metals in its environment.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7019866 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2020.00047 | DOI Listing |
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