AI Article Synopsis

  • Bacteria at acid mine drainage sites play a crucial role in water remediation by converting arsenite to arsenate, which helps in the removal of arsenic from contaminated water.
  • After exposure to arsenite, certain bacterial strains can develop resistant variants, particularly when grown in biofilms, and these variants increase in prevalence with higher arsenite concentrations.
  • The study identified that genes related to DNA repair were upregulated in resistant bacteria, and multiple mutations accumulated, particularly in a genomic island associated with arsenic resistance, shedding light on bacterial adaptation and genome evolution in toxic environments.

Article Abstract

bacteria are ubiquitous at acid mine drainage sites and play key roles in the remediation of water at these locations by oxidizing arsenite to arsenate, favouring the sorption of arsenic by iron oxides and their coprecipitation. Understanding the adaptive capacities of these bacteria is crucial to revealing how they persist and remain active in such extreme conditions. Interestingly, it was previously observed that after exposure to arsenite, when grown in a biofilm, some strains of bacteria develop variants that are more resistant to arsenic. Here, we identified the mechanisms involved in the emergence of such variants in biofilms. We found that the percentage of variants generated increased in the presence of high concentrations of arsenite (5.33 mM), especially in the detached cells after growth under biofilm-forming conditions. Analysis of gene expression in the parent strain CB2 revealed that genes involved in DNA repair were upregulated in the conditions where variants were observed. Finally, we assessed the phenotypes and genomes of the subsequent variants generated to evaluate the number of mutations compared to the parent strain. We determined that multiple point mutations accumulated after exposure to arsenite when cells were grown under biofilm conditions. Some of these mutations were found in what is referred to as ICE19, a genomic island (GI) carrying arsenic-resistance genes, also harbouring characteristics of an integrative and conjugative element (ICE). The mutations likely favoured the excision and duplication of this GI. This research aids in understanding how bacteria adapt to highly toxic environments, and, more generally, provides a window to bacterial genome evolution in extreme environments.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7660254PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/mgen.0.000447DOI Listing

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