Early transcriptional changes of heavy metal resistance and multiple efflux genes in Xanthomonas campestris pv. campestris under copper and heavy metal ion stress.

BMC Microbiol

Department of Life Sciences, Faculty of Science and Technology, The University of The West Indies, St. Augustine campus, St. Augustine, Trinidad and Tobago, W. I.

Published: March 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines how the bacterium Xanthomonas campestris pv. campestris (Xcc) responds to copper stress, using RNA sequencing to analyze gene expression after exposure to copper sulfate for 15 minutes.
  • Initial findings show changes in genes involved in stress response, biofilm formation, and metal efflux, with particular focus on the copper homeostasis gene (cohL) and a chromosomal efflux operon (czcCBA).
  • Results suggest that Xcc utilizes a combination of mechanisms to combat oxidative stress and enhance heavy metal resistance, indicating the presence of efflux genes possibly adapted for broader metal detoxification.

Article Abstract

Background: Copper-induced gene expression in Xanthomonas campestris pv. campestris (Xcc) is typically evaluated using targeted approaches involving qPCR. The global response to copper stress in Xcc and resistance to metal induced damage is not well understood. However, homologs of heavy metal efflux genes from the related Stenotrophomonas genus are found in Xanthomonas which suggests that metal related efflux may also be present.

Methods And Results: Gene expression in Xcc strain BrA1 exposed to 0.8 mM CuSO.5HO for 15 minutes was captured using RNA-seq analysis. Changes in expression was noted for genes related to general stress responses and oxidoreductases, biofilm formation, protein folding chaperones, heat-shock proteins, membrane lipid profile, multiple drug and efflux (MDR) transporters, and DNA repair were documented. At this timepoint only the cohL (copper homeostasis/tolerance) gene was upregulated as well as a chromosomal czcCBA efflux operon. An additional screen up to 4 hrs using qPCR was conducted using a wider range of heavy metals. Target genes included a cop-containing heavy metal resistance island and putative metal efflux genes. Several efflux pumps, including a copper resistance associated homolog from S. maltophilia, were upregulated under toxic copper stress. However, these pumps were also upregulated in response to other toxic heavy metals. Additionally, the temporal expression of the coh and cop operons was also observed, demonstrating co-expression of tolerance responses and later activation of part of the cop operon.

Conclusions: Overall, initial transcriptional responses focused on combating oxidative stress, mitigating protein damage and potentially increasing resistance to heavy metals and other biocides. A putative copper responsive efflux gene and others which might play a role in broader heavy metal resistance were also identified. Furthermore, the expression patterns of the cop operon in conjunction with other copper responsive genes allowed for a better understanding of the fate of copper ions in Xanthomonas. This work provides useful evidence for further evaluating MDR and other efflux pumps in metal-specific homeostasis and tolerance phenotypes in the Xanthomonas genus. Furthermore, non-canonical copper tolerance and resistance efflux pumps were potentially identified. These findings have implications for interpreting MIC differences among strains with homologous copLAB resistance genes, understanding survival under copper stress, and resistance in disease management.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10924375PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12866-024-03206-7DOI Listing

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