Cryptic environmental conjugative plasmid recruits a novel hybrid transposon resulting in a new plasmid with higher dispersion potential.
Iván Muñoz-GutiérrezLuis CantuJack ShanahanMiray GirguisMarlene de la CruzLuis Mota-BravoPublished in: mSphere (2024)
Cryptic conjugative plasmids are extrachromosomal DNA molecules without antibiotic-resistance genes (ARGs). Environmental bacteria carrying cryptic plasmids with a high conjugation rate threaten public health because they can capture clinically relevant ARGs and rapidly spread them to pathogenic bacteria. However, the mechanism to recruit ARG by cryptic conjugative plasmids in environmental bacteria has not been observed experimentally. Here, we document the first translocation of a transposon with multiple clinically relevant ARGs to a cryptic environmental conjugative plasmid. The new multidrug-resistant conjugative plasmid has a conjugation rate that is two orders of magnitude higher than the original plasmid that carries the ARG (i.e., the new plasmid from the environment can spread ARG more than two orders of magnitude faster). Our work illustrates the importance of studying the mobilization of ARGs in environmental bacteria. It sheds light on how cryptic conjugative plasmids recruit ARGs, a phenomenon at the root of the antibiotic crisis.
Keyphrases
- antibiotic resistance genes
- escherichia coli
- wastewater treatment
- microbial community
- public health
- human health
- anaerobic digestion
- klebsiella pneumoniae
- crispr cas
- multidrug resistant
- life cycle
- risk assessment
- climate change
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- cell free
- gram negative
- nucleic acid
- global health
- circulating tumor cells