Understanding the genetic basis of the incompatibility of IncK1 and IncK2 plasmids.

Open Res Eur

Wageningen Bioveterinary Research, Lelystd, 8221 RA, The Netherlands.

Published: October 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • * This study investigates the interaction between two subgroups of I-complex plasmids, IncK1 and IncK2, focusing on their RNAI structures, which differ by only five nucleotides and determine their compatibility.
  • * Through experiments with minireplicons and targeted mutations, the research found that only specific nucleotide changes in the RNAI structure affect compatibility, highlighting the importance of these findings for predicting plasmid behavior in future research.

Article Abstract

Antimicrobial resistance is a persistent challenge in human and veterinary medicine, which is often encoded on plasmids which are transmissible between bacterial cells. Incompatibility is the inability of two plasmids to be stably maintained in one cell which is caused by the presence of identical or closely related shared determinants between two plasmids originating from partition or replication mechanisms. For I-complex plasmids in , replication- based incompatibility is caused by the small antisense RNA stem-loop structure called RNAI. The I-complex plasmid group IncK consists of two compatible subgroups, IncK1 and IncK2, for which the RNAI differs only by five nucleotides. In this study we focussed on the interaction of the IncK1 and IncK2 RNAI structures by constructing minireplicons containing the replication region of IncK1 or IncK2 plasmids coupled with a kanamycin resistance marker. Using minireplicons excludes involvement of incompatibility mechanisms other than RNAI. Additionally, we performed single nucleotide mutagenesis targeting the five nucleotides that differ between the IncK1 and IncK2 RNAI sequences of these minireplicons. The obtained results show that a single nucleotide change in the RNAI structure is responsible for the compatible phenotype of IncK1 with IncK2 plasmids. Only nucleotides in the RNAI top loop and interior loop have an effect on minireplicon incompatibility with wild type plasmids, while mutations in the stem of the RNAI structure had no significant effect on incompatibility. Understanding the molecular basis of incompatibility is relevant for future predictions of plasmid incompatibility.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10724649PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/openreseurope.15121.2DOI Listing

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Understanding the genetic basis of the incompatibility of IncK1 and IncK2 plasmids.

Open Res Eur

October 2023

Wageningen Bioveterinary Research, Lelystd, 8221 RA, The Netherlands.

Article Synopsis
  • * This study investigates the interaction between two subgroups of I-complex plasmids, IncK1 and IncK2, focusing on their RNAI structures, which differ by only five nucleotides and determine their compatibility.
  • * Through experiments with minireplicons and targeted mutations, the research found that only specific nucleotide changes in the RNAI structure affect compatibility, highlighting the importance of these findings for predicting plasmid behavior in future research.
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