Accepted Manuscript E. coli recA gene improves gene targeted homologous recombination in Mycoplasma hyorhinis
Hassan Z.A. Ishag, Qiyan Xiong, Maojun Liu, Zhixin Feng, Guoqing Shao PII: DOI: Reference:
S0167-7012(17)30065-9 doi: 10.1016/j.mimet.2017.03.004 MIMET 5131
To appear in:
Journal of Microbiological Methods
Received date: Revised date: Accepted date:
20 October 2016 2 March 2017 6 March 2017
Please cite this article as: Hassan Z.A. Ishag, Qiyan Xiong, Maojun Liu, Zhixin Feng, Guoqing Shao , E. coli recA gene improves gene targeted homologous recombination in Mycoplasma hyorhinis. The address for the corresponding author was captured as affiliation for all authors. Please check if appropriate. Mimet(2017), doi: 10.1016/ j.mimet.2017.03.004
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT REVISED prominently E. coli recA Gene Improves Gene Targeted Homologous Recombination in
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Mycoplasma hyorhinis
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Hassan Z. A. Ishag1, 2, Qiyan Xiong1*, Maojun Liu1, Zhixin Feng1 and Guoqing Shao1
Institute of Veterinary Medicine, Jiangsu Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Key
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Laboratory of Veterinary Biological Engineering and Technology, Ministry of
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Agriculture, National Research Center for Engineering and Technology of Veterinary Bio-products, Nanjing 210014, China
College of Veterinary Sciences, University of Nyala, Nyala, Sudan
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*Corresponding author: Qiyan Xiong (E-mail:
[email protected])
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT Abstract Mycoplasma hyorhinis is an opportunistic pathogen of pigs. Recently, it has been shown to transform cell cultures, increasing the attention of the researchers. Studies on the pathogenesis require specific genetic tool that is not yet available for
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the pathogen. To address this limitation, we constructed two suicide plasmids
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pGEMT-tetM/LR and pGEMT-recA-tetM/LR having a tetracycline resistance marker
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flanked by two hemolysin gene arms. The latter plasmid encodes an E. coli recA, a gene involved in DNA recombination, repair and maintenance of DNA. Using
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inactivation of the hemolysin gene, which results in a detectable and measurable
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phenotype, we found that each plasmid can disrupt the hemolysin gene of M. hyorhinis through a double cross-over homologous recombination. However,
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inclusion of the E. coli recA gene in the construct resulted in 9-fold increase in the
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frequency of hemolysin gene mutants among the screened tetracycline resistance colonies. The resultant hemolysin mutant strain lacks the ability to lyse mouse bed
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blood cells (RBC) when tested in vitro (p<0.001). The host-plasmid system described
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in this study, has applications for the genetic manipulation of this pathogen and potentially other mycoplasmas.
Keywords: Mycoplasma hyorhinis, Suicide Vector, recA gene, Hemolysin, Inactivation
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT 1. Introduction Mycoplasma hyorhinis (M. hyorhinis) is a common commensal inhabitant of pigs but can become an important pathogen of swine that also causes lung lesions and inflammation (Razin et al., 1998), as well as contamination of laboratory tissue
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culture cells. It has also been shown to be associated with oncogenic transformation in
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vitro (Namiki et al., 2009). These properties of M. hyorhinis have increased the
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interest to the researchers.
Following the determination of the first complete genome sequence of M.
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hyorhinis HUB-1 (Liu et al., 2010), genomes of several additional strains have been
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deposited in GenBank (Calcutt et al., 2012). However, the lack of genetic tools to generate targeted gene knockouts and to conduct complementation studies hinders the
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study of gene function in this pathogen. Recently, we have described a plasmid
(Ishag et al., 2016).
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expressing GFP to monitor the transient gene transfer and expression in M. hyorhinis
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Gene disruption techniques have been developed for other mycoplasmas such
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as transposon mutagenesis (Dybvig and Alderete, 1988, Dybvig and Cassell, 1987, Dybvig et al., 2000, Knudtson and Minion, 1993, Maglennon et al., 2013, Mahairas and Minion, 1989). This technique has also been described for the M. hyorhinis (Dybvig and Alderete, 1988). However, transposon mutagenesis produces random insertions into the genome of mycoplasma, where it can be difficult to isolate desired mutants. Replicative plasmids that contain an origin of replication (oriC) of the mycoplasma along with an antimicrobial resistance marker have also been described
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT for a few mycoplasmas (Chopra-Dewasthaly et al., 2008, Cordova et al., 2002, Duret et al., 2005, Janis et al., 2005, Lartigue et al., 2003, Lee et al., 2008, Li et al., 2015, Maglennon et al., 2013, Nieszner et al., 2013, Shahid et al., 2014, Sharma et al., 2015). Due to the sequence homology between the targeted gene cloned into the replicative
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plasmid and the mycoplasma chromosome, these oriC-based plasmids were used in
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some cases to induce targeted gene disruption by homologous recombination.
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However, the possibility of having oriC-plasmids integrated at the oriC site of the mycoplasma, extrachromosomal forms or mixtures further complicates subsequent
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analysis
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High-throughput manipulation of natural or synthetic genomes in yeast through the clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR)/
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CRISPR-associated (Cas) system has recently been applied for the genome
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engineering of Mycoplasma mycoides subsp. capri GM12 (Mmc) (Tsarmpopoulos et al., 2016). However, cloning and assembly of a synthetic bacterial genome in yeast
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followed by a back transplantation into the recipient bacterial cells are both expensive
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and technically complex.
Using non-replicative (suicide) plasmids to disrupt target genes and to
generate stable mutants through homologous recombination has been described for Mmc (Allam et al., 2010), Mycoplasma gallisepticum (Burgos et al., 2008), Acholeplasma laidlawii (Dybvig and Woodard, 1992) and Mycoplasma genitalium (Dhandayuthapani et al., 2001, Dhandayuthapani et al., 1999) with a low frequency, probably due to the fact that mycoplasmas are generally lacking efficient
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT recombination systems that in turn reduces allelic exchange. The product of recA gene is a key protein involved in the DNA recombination and repair (Horii et al., 1980). The E. coli recA gene has been previously used to enhance the homologous recombination as well as recovery of the desired mutants in
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Mmc (Allam et al., 2010). Therefore, in this study we aimed to construct a suicide
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plasmid pGEMT-recA-tetM/LR harboring an E. coli recA gene in addition to tetM as a
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tetracycline selection marker, and to test whether the inclusion of recA in the construct could increase the frequency of generating desired mutants in M. hyorhinis
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by homologous recombination. The function of this plasmid was also compared to a
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plasmid that lacked the recA gene (pGEMT-tetM/LR). It should be noted that although most if not all Mycoplasma species contain a recA gene, the report by Allam et al.,
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provided the impetus for including a heterologous recA gene during development of
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this method.
In another mycoplasma species, the product of the hemolysin gene was shown
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to lyse RBCs (Kannan and Baseman, 2000). Therefore, in this study we selected the
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M. hyorhinis hemolysin gene (GI: 504395455) to be inactivated since this gene potentially confers a hemolytic phenotype that can easily be measured. The resultant hemolysin mutant strain was expected to lose the ability to lyse RBCs when tested in vitro.
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT 2. Materials and methods 2.1 Bacterial strains and cultural conditions M. hyorhinis strain HUB-1 (GenBank accession CP002170.1) was kindly provided by Prof. Shaobo Xiao (Huazhong Agricultural University, Wuhan, China)
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and was cultured at 37 °C in KM2 cell-free liquid medium (a modified Friis medium)
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G-10; Gene Company Limited, Chi Wan,
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medium, 0.7 % Agar (Biowest Agarose
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containing 20 % (v/v) swine serum (Xiong et al., 2016). To prepare KM2-solid
Hong Kong) was added to the KM2 liquid medium. For the growth of the mutants,
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tetracycline hydrochloride (Sigma-Aldrich, China) was added at 5.0 µg/ml and 2.5
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µg/ml to the liquid and solid KM2 media respectively.
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2.2 Vector construction
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We used the pGEM®-T vector (Promega, China) to construct the suicide vectors. The E. coli XL-10 competent cells (Vazyme, China) were used to sub-clone
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and amplify different constructs. The tetM gene (ID: AGI19285.1) was PCR amplified
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from pSE-1 vector provided by Prof. Shaobo Xiao (Huazhong Agricultural University, Wuhan, China) and cloned into pGEM®-T vector at SpeI/PstI sites by in-fusion PCR cloning methods (Vazyme, China). The left arm (LA) of the hemolysin gene (amplified from M. hyorhinis DNA) was fused by PCR to the spiralin gene promoter (from Spiroplasma citri, GI: 2384684, amplified from pSE-1 vector) to form a single fragment which was cloned upstream of the tetM gene at the SpeI site while the right arm (RA) of the hemolysin gene was cloned downstream of tetM gene at the PstI site.
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT Each hemolysin gene arm contains >400 bp homologous sequence to facilitate recombination at the target site (Dhandayuthapani et al., 2001, Dhandayuthapani et al., 1999, Duret et al., 2005) and were cloned to flank the tetM gene as well as to introduce the spiralin gene promoter. The resultant plasmid was designated
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pGEMT-tetM/LR. The recombinase gene (recA), GI:446885887 was then PCR
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amplified from E. coli BL-21 DNA, ligated by PCR with the spiralin gene promoter to
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form a single fragment and was cloned into pGEMT-tetM/LR by in-fusion PCR cloning at the NcoI site. The resulting plasmid was designated pGEMT-recA-tetM/LR.
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All cloning steps were verified by colony PCR and analysis of DNA sequencing. The
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diagram of the vector constructions is shown in Figure 1, while the primers used to
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amplify or ligate the fragments into each, are listed in Table-1.
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2.3 Electroporation of M. hyorhinis
Preparation of competent cells of M. hyorhinis HUB-1 and its electroporation
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were performed following previously published methods with minor modifications 10 8 CCU)
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(Ishag et al., 2016, Maglennon et al., 2013). Briefly, M. hyorhinis
was harvested by centrifugation at 10,000 × g for 10 min at 4 °C, resuspended and washed twice in HEPES–sucrose buffer (272 mM Sucrose, 200 mM HEPES, pH 7.2) by centrifugation as above. The competent cells were finally resuspended in 100 µl HEPES–sucrose buffer and were transformed immediately. Fo h
ansfo ma ion, 20 μg of p asmid DNA was mix d wi h 100 µ omp
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cells and the DNA–cell mixture was transferred to a chilled 0.2 cm gap-size Gene
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT Pulser cuvette (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA, USA). The mixture was incubated on ice for 10 min. Electroporation was performed using an ECM 630 Electroporation System Ha va d Appa a s BTX, Ho is on, MA, USA) a 2.5 KV, 125 Ω, and 25 µF. Immediately following electroporation, 900 µl chilled KM2-medium was added to the
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transformed cells. The cells were incubated on ice for 10 min, and recovered at 37 °C
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for 3 hours. Transformants were diluted 1:10 in KM2 medium, palted on KM2-agar
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containing 2.5 µg/ml tetracycline and grown at 37 °C. After 4-7 days, the tetracycline-resistant colonies were grown in KM2 liquid medium containing 5 µg/ml
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tetracycline.
2.4 Analysis of the hemolysin gene inactivation mycoplasma
transformants
containing
pGEMT-tetM/LR
and
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Putative
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pGEMT-recA-tetM/LR plasmids were plated on KM2-Agar containing 2.5 µg/ml tetracycline. The individual tetracycline resistant colonies were verified for insertion
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of tetM in the genome of M. hyorhinis by PCR using the hemolysin gene flanking
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primers shown in Table 1 to observe any difference in the size of the PCR product. The large PCR product (expected to contain tetM gene, 1917 bp directed by the spiralin gene promoter and flanked by the hemolysin gene arms) was further analyzed by tetM-PCR using universal tetM gene screening primers (Table-1) (Sharma et al., 2014). This PCR could produce predicted 339 bp amplicon from tetM if tetM insertion had occurred. Finally, the large PCR product (hemolysin mutant) was submitted to the DNA sequencing (GeneScript Company, China) using hemolysin gene flanking
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT primers shown in (Table-1) to confirm the presence of tetM gene at the desired site.
2.5 Analysis of loss of phenotype in the mutants The mutant and wild-type clones were sub-cultured in KM2 medium containing
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5 µg/ml tetracycline and the culture was centrifuged at 10,000 × g for 10 min at 4 °C.
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The supernatants were collected and examined for the hemolysis activity using mouse
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RBCs collected from BALB/c mice (2 weeks old) purchased from the Animal Center of Nanjing Army Hospital (Nanjing, China). The hemolytic activity was determined
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as previously described (Chu and Holt, 1994, Kannan and Baseman, 2000, Takamatsu
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et al., 2001) with minor modifications. Briefly, RBCs were incubated with the supernatants at 37 °C for 2 hours. Negative control samples were incubated with PBS.
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The samples were then centrifuged at 1,500 × g for 10 min and the released
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hemoglobin was measured at 405 nm in a spectrophotometer. All the reactions were
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performed in triplicate.
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Statistical analysis
Data obtained from three individual experiments, were recorded as Mean ±
SD, and subjected to one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) using SPSS (version 16.0, SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL, USA). p < 0.05 was considered statistically significant.
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT 3. Results 3.1 Vector construction In the current study, DNA fragments containing tetM, recA, hemolysin gene arms and spiralin gene promoter were PCR amplified and individually cloned into the plasmid
to
yield
the
desired
pGEMT-tetM/LR
(Fig.1A).
and
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pGEM®-T
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pGEMT-recA-tetM/LR suicide vectors (Fig.1B).
3.2 Electroporation of M. hyorhinis and detection of recombinants
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The transformation of M. hyorhinis by polyethylene glycol (PEG) has
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previously been described (Dybvig and Alderete, 1988). However, in this study the suicide plasmids were introduced into M. hyorhinis competent cells by the
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electroporation method (Maglennon et al., 2013). The electric field, electric resistance,
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and the amount of the DNA required for the transformation were optimized. With optimal conditions of 20 µg plasmid DNA and an electroporation set at 2.5 kV, 125 Ω
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and 25 μF, we obtained average transformation frequencies (transformants/CFU) of
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about 3.2×10-4 and 4×10-3 for pGEMT-tetM/LR and pGEMT-recA-tetM/LR respectively. Tetracycline-resistant colonies selected on mycoplasma KM2-Agar plates supplemented with 2.5 µg/ml tetracycline, could be visualized under the microscope on day-3 post-incubation at 37 °C and by naked eye on day-5 (Fig.2). Importantly, we did not observe any significant difference in the growth rate between the hemolysin wild-type and mutant clones of M. hyorhinis which indicates that the hemolysin gene is not an essential gene for bacterial growth and survival in vitro.
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT 3.3 Targeted hemolysin inactivation Following targeted insertion of the tetM gene along with the spiralin gene promoter into the hemolysin gene site, a predicted fragment of hemolysin (724 bp) will be replaced with 2,230 bp (tetM gene plus spiralin gene promoter) through
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homologous recombination event (Fig.3). Thus, the total size of the wild-type
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hemolysin gene (no insertion) is 1566 bp while the mutant hemolysin gene locus will
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be 3072 bp. To confirm this, we extracted DNA from M. hyorhinis culture transformed with pGEMT-tetM/LR or pGEMT-recA-tetM/LR plasmids and analyzed
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the insertion of the tetM gene at the hemolysin gene site (Fig.3).
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hemolysin gene flanking primers.
by PCR using
We performed several experiments to evaluate disruption of the hemolysin
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gene by homologous recombination using our constructs and to evaluate whether
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inclusion of the recA gene in the construct, could improve the targeted gene disruption. In three independent transformation experiments with the basic (or parental) suicide
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vector having no recA gene (pGEMT-tetM/LR), only 0 of 30 (0%), 1 of 50 (2%) and 1 on s s
n d, was id n ifi d as a h mo ysin
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of 18 (5.5%) tetracycline- sis an
mutant with average 2% (Fig.4A, Fig.4B and Fig.4C). It also reveals that, an about 96 tetracycline resistant colonies appear with no added DNA. However, inclusion of E. coli recA in the construct, improved the generation of targeted hemolysin mutants. Indeed, in three independent transformation experiments using plasmid encoding recA gene (pGEMT-recA-tetM/LR) to create a targeted mutation at the hemolysin gene site, the number of hemolysin mutants detected have increased. Among the
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT tetracycline-resistant clones screened by PCR using hemolysin gene flanking primers, we have detected 2 of 8 (25%), 2 of 11 (18.2%) and 3 of 22 (13.6%) hemolysin mutant with average 18.9% (Fig.5A and Fig.5B and Fig.5C). Thus, an about 34 tetracycline resistant colonies appear with no added DNA. We conclude that,
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inclusion of the E. coli recA gene in the construct resulted in an approximately 9-fold
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increase in the percentage of the transformants that had the desired mutation.
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Furthermore, in each transformation experiment with pGEMT-recA-tetM/LR, we could detect at least two hemolysin mutant transformants indicating the usefulness of the
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recA gene to recover the desired mutant. However, screening of more resistant
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colonies is required to fully enumerate the efficacy of recA gene inclusion in this construct.
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The mutant hemolysin PCR products of 3072 bp (2 with pGEMT-tetM/LR and
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7 for pGEMT-recA-tetM/LR) were further subjected to the tetM-PCR analysis using tetM gene screening primers (Table-1) o onfi m h p s n
of h tetM gene at the
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desired site. If the tetM gene had inserted into the hemolysin gene site, the tetM-PCR
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could produce a predicted 339 bp. The tetM-PCR analysis of the hemolysin mutant PCR product has confirmed that tetracycline resistance was correlated with the presence of the tetracycline determinant in the hemolysin mutant strain. We used the hemolysin gene flanking primers forward and reverse (mapped in Fig.3) to sequence the mutant PCR product generated by the hemolysin gene flanking primers and to confirm the location, precise site of insertion, and direction of insertion of tetM gene along with spiralin gene promoter into the hemolysin gene site. To cover
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT the entire insertion, we designed an additional forward primer (tetM-middle-F, Table-1) from the C-terminal of the forward sequencing product and was used to sequence the middle part of the insertion. Assembly of the sequencing reactions and analysis of the resultant sequence showed the presence of the tetM gene along with
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the spiralin gene promoter flanked by the hemolysin gene sequence. Two PCR
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products that correspond to the wild-type hemolysin gene (prepared with hemolysin
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gene flanking primers) were also subjected to the DNA sequencing using hemolysin gene flanking primers. As expected, analysis of the sequencing product revealed that
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no insertion occurred at this region (data not shown).
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Two colonies containing the hemolysin gene mutation generated by each of pGEMT-tetM/LR and pGEMT-recA-tetM/LR were further passaged three times in the
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presence of tetracycline to evaluate the stability of the disruption. The tetM-specific
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PCR confirmed the presence of tetM gene in the mutant strain, indicating the stability of the targeted gene disruption.
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As an alternative integration event, we considered the possibility that the
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whole plasmid could integrate at either arm of the hemolysin gene by a single cross-over recombination. We chose to investigate the integration of pGEMT-tetM/LR by a single cross over at the hemolysin right arm site (Fig.6SA). We designed two primers to investigate this hypothesis. The forward primer (single-cross-F, Table-1) was designed to bind the upstream region of the hemolysin right arm (this region will be deleted in case of the double-cross over homologous recombination but not in single cross-over event), while the reverse primer (single-cross-R,Table-1) was
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT designed to bind the tetM gene present in the pGEMT-tetM/LR plasmid. If a single cross-over had occurred at this region, we would obtain a PCR fragment of 1017 bp. However, this fragment will be absent in a double-cross over occurrence (the single-cross-F binding site will be deleted). Furthermore, the single cross-over will
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retain hemolysin gene function. We extracted the DNA from the hemolysin mutant
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samples (2 with pGEMT-tetM/LR and 7 for pGEMT-recA-tetM/LR) and screened for
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the single cross-over using single-cross primers. In our experiment, we failed to obtain a positive PCR product (Fig.6SB), indicating that the insertion of tetM gene
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along with spiralin gene promoter at the hemolysin gene site is due to the double
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cross-over homologous recombination at the hemolysin gene site rather than a single cross-over. However, the presence of the wild-type hemolysin gene could also
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indicate spontaneous tetracycline resistance colonies or the integration of the full
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plasmid outside the hemolysin gene "the latter scenario is considered to be unlikely to happen due to the absence of sequence homology between the vector and the
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M.hyorhinis genome except for the hemolysin gene arms".
3.4 Analysis of the RBCs hemolysis phenotype In our preliminary experiment, we observed that supernatants obtained from the culture of M. hyorhinis could lyse mouse RBCs (data not shown). Therefore, the supernatants collected from the M. hyorhinis harboring the disrupted hemolysin gene were expected to reduce the ability to lyse the RBCs. To test this phenotype, the wild-type (a positive control) and hemolysin mutant M. hyorhinis (2 obtained with
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT pGEM-tetM/LR and 7 with pGEM-recA-tetM/LR) were grown in KM2 medium and the supernatants were collected and used to assay the hemolysis activity. RBCs were also incubated with PBS as a negative control. We found that the supernatant (un-diluted) collected from all the hemolysin mutant cultures, have a diminished
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hemolysis activity compared to the positive control (Fig.7), which indicated the
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usefulness of these vectors to precisely inactivate the hemolysin gene of M. hyorhinis
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and should be further applicable to the study of additional target genes.
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4. Discussion
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Currently, there are no available genetic manipulation systems to specifically inactive genes in M. hyorhinis. As a result, studies to identify the virulence factors
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and the pathogenesis in M. hyorhinis are hindered (Halbedel and Stulke, 2007, Pilo et
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al., 2007). A promising method to study mycoplasma genetics and pathogenesis is to transform the pathogen with plasmids contain regions homologous to the
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chromosomal DNA that results in targeted gene inactivation via homologous
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recombination. Here, we attempted to develop suicide vectors having small regions of homology with chromosomal DNA (~ 400-450 bp) and to evaluate their potential to induce targeted insertional mutagenesis in the genome of M. hyorhinis. We also compared the effect recA gene incorporation by comparing the mutagenesis frequency between
pGEM-recA-tetM/LR
with
the
plasmid
having
no
recA
gene
(pGEM-tetM/LR). We observed that inclusion of the recA gene in the suicide vector improved the frequency of obtaining mutation among the screened tetracycline
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT resistance colonies. I ’s w
-know that, the recA gene is the only recombination gene
universally present in mycoplasmas (Allam et al., 2010), and that in at least some species, the gene is not essential (French et al., 2008). However, the recombination event in Mollicutes probably depends on recA gene (Dybvig and Woodard, 1992,
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Ogasawara et al., 1991, Rocha et al., 2005). In a previous publication, it has been
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suggested that, having a divergent gene sequence (with a constitutive promoter) might
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reduce instability issues with the endogenous recA gene and may augment the homologous recombination (Allam et al., 2010). To test this hypothesis with M.
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hyorhinis, we first analyzed the similarity index between the E. coli recA gene and
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that other candidate recombinase genes of M. hyorhinis such as recA gene (GI: 504896985) or recR gene (GI: 503066962) to exclude the possibility of homologous
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recombination with a host recombinase gene. Following Blastn analysis, we observed
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that, there is no significant similarity between E. coli recA gene used in our constructs and the recombinase genes of M. hyorhinis. Furthermore, our results are consistent
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with the above observation, and indicated that, inclusion of recA gene in the construct
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increased the mutation recovery from 3.8% to 18.9% (5 fold-increase). However, this 5 fold-increase in the disruption efficiency obtained by the pGEM-recA-tetM/LR plasmid, is considered low compared to the 140-fold increase obtained with the pExp1-ctpA::tetM-recAec plasmid developed by Allam (Allam et al., 2010) for Mmc. This reduced disruption efficiency observed in our study, may be explained by the difference in the promoters (we used the spiralin gene promoter from another species) used in the constructs and the orientation of the tetM gene. Importantly, all hemolysin
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT disrupted mutants that were obtained using pGEM-recA-tetM/LR occurred by a double-crossover homologous recombination which suggest that, this disruption may be stable. Compared to the mutant obtained by means of the plasmid integration into the genome of the species (transposon mutagenesis or oriC-plasmids), we assume that,
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the mutants obtained with pGEMT-recA-tetM/LR may not contain remnants of the
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plasmid backbone, which may also enhance the stability. Absorbance at 405 nm has
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been used to evaluate the hemolysis of mouse erythrocytes following previously described methods (Gleibs et al., 1995). In our study, we observed we observed that
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mouse RBCs compared to the wild-type.
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the M. hyorhinis strains harboring the hemolysin mutation lacked the ability to lyse
Only a few examples of a successful double-crossover homologous
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recombination using a suicide plasmid in a mycoplasma have been reported, among
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these are M. genitalium (Burgos et al., 2008, Kannan and Baseman, 2006). The novel vector system described here should help manipulate the M. hyorhinis genome and
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bacteria.
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eventually facilitate studying the gene functions and pathogenic mechanisms of the
Competing interests The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
Acknowledgments This work was supported by the Postdoctoral Fund of Jiangsu Academy of
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT Agricultural Sciences, China (6511318) National Natural Sciences Foundation of China (Grant No. 31550110211).
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Figure legends
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cells. Veterinary Microbiology. 186, 82-89.
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Fig.1 pGEMT-tetM/LR and pGEMT-recA-tetM/LR construction: The tetM gene was cloned into pGEM®-T vector at the SpeI/PstI sites, Hemolysin gene left arm spliced
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with spiralin gene promoter (LA/Sp) was cloned at SpeI site, Hemolysin gene right arm (RA) was cloned at the SalI to yield pGEMT-tetM/LR plasmid (A). Finally, the recA gene spliced with spiralin gene promoter was cloned into the pGEMT-tetM/LR plasmid at NcoI site. The resultant vector designated pGEMT-recA-tetM/LR (B).
Fig.2 Phenotype of the colonies of M. hyorhinis cells ( 10 8 CCU) electroporated with pGEMT-tetM/LR (B) and pGEMT-recA-tetM/LR (C) plasmids and grown on 20
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT KM2-Agar containing 2.5 µg/ml tetracycline at 37 °C for 5 days. Untransformed control colonies were shown in (A). The mutant colonies harboring the modified DNA were indicated by lines.
at
the
hemolysin
gene
site
using
pGEMT-tetM/LR
and
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promoter
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Fig.3 Prediction of the possible insertion of tetM gene along with spiralin gene
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pGEMT-recA-tetM/LR plasmids. If the insertion at the hemolysin gene site had occurred, a fragment of about 3072-bp could be detected by PCR using hemolysin
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gene flanking primers (Table-1). In the absence of insertion, the wild-type hemolysin
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gene could be detected (1566-bp). The precise location of the hemolysin gene flanking primers in the genome was mapped in the figure and further indicated by a
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black arrow.
Fig.4 Investigation of tetM gene insertion by PCR (using hemolysin gene flanking
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primers, Table-1) following transformation with pGEMT-tetM/LR. Wild-type
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hemolysin (no insertion) exhibits 1566 bp, while the mutant hemolysin gene produce about 3072 bp. (A), (B) and (C), represent the repeats of the experiments. Lane 1 is control un-transformed; others are the analyzed resistant clones.
Fig.5 Investigation of tetM gene insertion by PCR (using hemolysin gene flanking primers, Table-1) following transformation with pGEMT-recA-tetM/LR, as described in (Fig.4). (A), (B) and (C), represents repeats of the experiments. (A-B): Lane 1 is
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Fig.6 Prediction and investigation of a single cross-over event. The two suicide
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plasmids were shown in (A), the hemolysin gene location in (B) and the prediction of If a
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the plasmid integration at the right arm of the hemolysin gene was shown in (C).
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single cross-over had occurred at this region, we expected to get a PCR product (using single-cross primer-F and single-cross primer-R, Table-1) of 1017 bp. DNA was
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extracted from the 7 hemolysin mutant samples (2 with pGEMT-tetM/LR and 7 for
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pGEMT-recA-tetM/LR) and screened by PCR to detect the possible occurrence of a single cross-over. In our experiment, we failed to obtain a positive PCR product (D),
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double cross-over homologous recombination.
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Fig.7 Hemolysis activity of wild-type M. hyorhinis and hemolysin mutant M.
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hyorhinis. Supernatant of wild-type M. hyorhinis and hemolysin mutant M. hyorhinis were collected, serially 2-fold diluted and incubated with mouse RBCs. PBS was used as a negative control. The released hemoglobin was determined by measuring the optical density at 405 nm in a spectrophotometer. All reactions were performed in triplicate. P1 and P2 are pGEMT-tetM/LR and pGEMT-recA-tetM/LR plasmids respectively. Data presented as Means ± SD (n= 3). p< 0.001 versus control.
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT Table-1 List of primers used to construct pGEM-tetM/LR and pGEM-recA-tetM/LR plasmids
tetM gene
Primer Name
tetM
(no promoter)
Hemolysin-LA-splicing Hemolysin -LA spliced to
Primer sequence (5´-3´)
Product
site
F: GAAATATAAGAAACTAGTATGAAAATTATTAATATTGGAGTTTTAGCTCATGTTGATGC 1917
SpeI/
R: TTCGATTGGTCGACCTGCAGTTATTTTATTGAACATATATCGTACTTTATCTATCCG
PstI
F: GCGGGATATCACTAGTCCAGGCGCACTTACAAAAGATCAC
437 SpeI
R: CTTCACTGTTTTCTTGTTCACTAACATCACAATATCAGCATCTTGCTCGATAG Spiralin gene
F: TGCTGATATTGTGATGTTAGTGAACAAGAAAACAGTGAAGCACCAG
form a single fragment
promoter-splicing-1
R:AATTTTCATACTAGTTTCTTATATTTCCTTTCTCTATTAAGTAGTGTTTTTATTAAA
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AGC Hemolysin-RA
313
RI
Spiralin gene promoter to
Hemolysin -RA
Cloning
(bp)
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Target Amplicon
F:ATAACTGCAGGTCGACAATCGAAGCTTGATTAGAACATCATAGC
405
SalI
R:CTCCCATATGGTCGACTACTACAATTACTGCTTTCCGAGTTATTAAAATAC
RecA gene spliced to
F: GAAAGGAAATATAAGAAATGGCTATCGACGAAAACAAACAG
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RecA- splicing
NcoI
R: TATCCCGCGGCCATGGTTAAAAATCTTCGTTAGTTTCTGCTACGCCT Spiralin gene
F: CTCCCGGCCGCCATGTTAGTGAACAAGAAAACAGTGAAGCACCAG
form a single fragment
promoter-splicing-2
R:TTTCGTCGATAGCCATTTCTTATATTTCCTTTCTCTATTAAGTAGTGTTTTTATTAAAA
1566
-
F: GCAGTTATGGAAGGGATACG
339
-
1017
-
-
-
G Hemolysin flanking
gene product
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Spiralin gene promoter to
Hemolysin flanking
1062
F: CAATTAGCACGTGAATTAGACACACCG
tetM
tetM
screening
D
R: CCATAATTAGCCTTCATTTTTCTTTGTGATTTGAATTTC
Single cross-over
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R: TTCTTGAATACACCGAGCAG
Single cross-over
predicted fragment
R: GCCCTGTTAGTACCCCAGCAGATTTTC
tetM middle-F
F: GTGTGTGTGACGAACTTTACCGAATCTG
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Middle part of the tetM
F: GAGTCAAGGTTTTCAAGGATTCCAGTTAG
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TetM = tetracycline hydrochloride, LA = left arm and RA = right arm.
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
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Highlights The pGEMT-tetM/LR and pGEMT-recA-tetM/LR suicide vectors have been constructed. These vectors were used to disrupt Hemolysin gene by inserting the tetM gene at the hemolysin site. Inclusion of recA gene in the constructs improved the gene targeting efficiency. Hemolysin mutants have diminished ability to lyse mouse erythrocytes.
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