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Improved transformation efficiency in Mycoplasma hominis enables disruption of the MIB–MIP system targeting human immunoglobulins

The pathogenicity of Mycoplasma hominis is poorly understood, mainly due to the absence of efficient genetic tools. A polyethylene glycol-mediated transformation protocol was recently developed for the M. hominis reference strain M132 using the pMT85-Tet plasmid. The transformation efficiency remain...

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Autores principales: Guiraud, Jennifer, Le Roy, Chloé, Rideau, Fabien, Sirand-Pugnet, Pascal, Lartigue, Carole, Bébéar, Cécile, Arfi, Yonathan, Pereyre, Sabine
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10581049/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37737635
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.01873-23
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author Guiraud, Jennifer
Le Roy, Chloé
Rideau, Fabien
Sirand-Pugnet, Pascal
Lartigue, Carole
Bébéar, Cécile
Arfi, Yonathan
Pereyre, Sabine
author_facet Guiraud, Jennifer
Le Roy, Chloé
Rideau, Fabien
Sirand-Pugnet, Pascal
Lartigue, Carole
Bébéar, Cécile
Arfi, Yonathan
Pereyre, Sabine
author_sort Guiraud, Jennifer
collection PubMed
description The pathogenicity of Mycoplasma hominis is poorly understood, mainly due to the absence of efficient genetic tools. A polyethylene glycol-mediated transformation protocol was recently developed for the M. hominis reference strain M132 using the pMT85-Tet plasmid. The transformation efficiency remained low, hampering generation of a large mutant library. In this study, we improved transformation efficiency by designing M. hominis-specific pMT85 derivatives. Using the Gibson Assembly, the Enterococcus-derived tet(M) gene of the pMT85-Tet plasmid was replaced by that of a M. hominis clinical isolate. Next, the Spiroplasma-derived spiralin gene promoter driving tet(M) expression was substituted by one of three putative regulatory regions (RRs): the M. hominis arginine deiminase RR, the M. hominis elongation factor Tu RR, or the 68 bp SynMyco synthetic RR. SynMyco-based construction led to a 100-fold increase in transformation efficiency in M. hominis M132. This construct was also transformed into the M. hominis PG21 reference strain and three other clinical isolates. The transposon insertion locus was determined for 128 M132-transformants. The majority of the impacted coding sequences encoded lipoproteins and proteins involved in DNA repair or in gene transfer. One transposon integration site was in the mycoplasma immunoglobulin protease gene. Phenotypic characterization of the mutant showed complete disruption of the human antibody cleavage ability of the transformant. These results demonstrate that our M. hominis-optimized plasmid can be used to generate large random transposon insertion libraries, enabling future studies of the pathogenicity of M. hominis. IMPORTANCE: Mycoplasma hominis is an opportunistic human pathogen, whose physiopathology is poorly understood and for which genetic tools for transposition mutagenesis have been unavailable for years. A PEG-mediated transformation protocol was developed using the pMT85-Tet plasmid, but the transformation efficiency remained low. We designed a modified pMT85-Tet plasmid suitable for M. hominis. The use of a synthetic regulatory region upstream of the antibiotic resistance marker led to a 100-fold increase in the transformation efficiency. The generation and characterization of large transposon mutagenesis mutant libraries will provide insight into M. hominis pathogenesis. We selected a transformant in which the transposon was integrated in the locus encoding the immunoglobulin cleavage system MIB–MIP. Phenotypic characterization showed that the wild-type strain has a functional MIB–MIP system, whereas the mutant strain had lost the ability to cleave human immunoglobulins.
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spelling pubmed-105810492023-10-18 Improved transformation efficiency in Mycoplasma hominis enables disruption of the MIB–MIP system targeting human immunoglobulins Guiraud, Jennifer Le Roy, Chloé Rideau, Fabien Sirand-Pugnet, Pascal Lartigue, Carole Bébéar, Cécile Arfi, Yonathan Pereyre, Sabine Microbiol Spectr Research Article The pathogenicity of Mycoplasma hominis is poorly understood, mainly due to the absence of efficient genetic tools. A polyethylene glycol-mediated transformation protocol was recently developed for the M. hominis reference strain M132 using the pMT85-Tet plasmid. The transformation efficiency remained low, hampering generation of a large mutant library. In this study, we improved transformation efficiency by designing M. hominis-specific pMT85 derivatives. Using the Gibson Assembly, the Enterococcus-derived tet(M) gene of the pMT85-Tet plasmid was replaced by that of a M. hominis clinical isolate. Next, the Spiroplasma-derived spiralin gene promoter driving tet(M) expression was substituted by one of three putative regulatory regions (RRs): the M. hominis arginine deiminase RR, the M. hominis elongation factor Tu RR, or the 68 bp SynMyco synthetic RR. SynMyco-based construction led to a 100-fold increase in transformation efficiency in M. hominis M132. This construct was also transformed into the M. hominis PG21 reference strain and three other clinical isolates. The transposon insertion locus was determined for 128 M132-transformants. The majority of the impacted coding sequences encoded lipoproteins and proteins involved in DNA repair or in gene transfer. One transposon integration site was in the mycoplasma immunoglobulin protease gene. Phenotypic characterization of the mutant showed complete disruption of the human antibody cleavage ability of the transformant. These results demonstrate that our M. hominis-optimized plasmid can be used to generate large random transposon insertion libraries, enabling future studies of the pathogenicity of M. hominis. IMPORTANCE: Mycoplasma hominis is an opportunistic human pathogen, whose physiopathology is poorly understood and for which genetic tools for transposition mutagenesis have been unavailable for years. A PEG-mediated transformation protocol was developed using the pMT85-Tet plasmid, but the transformation efficiency remained low. We designed a modified pMT85-Tet plasmid suitable for M. hominis. The use of a synthetic regulatory region upstream of the antibiotic resistance marker led to a 100-fold increase in the transformation efficiency. The generation and characterization of large transposon mutagenesis mutant libraries will provide insight into M. hominis pathogenesis. We selected a transformant in which the transposon was integrated in the locus encoding the immunoglobulin cleavage system MIB–MIP. Phenotypic characterization showed that the wild-type strain has a functional MIB–MIP system, whereas the mutant strain had lost the ability to cleave human immunoglobulins. American Society for Microbiology 2023-09-22 /pmc/articles/PMC10581049/ /pubmed/37737635 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.01873-23 Text en Copyright © 2023 Guiraud et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
Guiraud, Jennifer
Le Roy, Chloé
Rideau, Fabien
Sirand-Pugnet, Pascal
Lartigue, Carole
Bébéar, Cécile
Arfi, Yonathan
Pereyre, Sabine
Improved transformation efficiency in Mycoplasma hominis enables disruption of the MIB–MIP system targeting human immunoglobulins
title Improved transformation efficiency in Mycoplasma hominis enables disruption of the MIB–MIP system targeting human immunoglobulins
title_full Improved transformation efficiency in Mycoplasma hominis enables disruption of the MIB–MIP system targeting human immunoglobulins
title_fullStr Improved transformation efficiency in Mycoplasma hominis enables disruption of the MIB–MIP system targeting human immunoglobulins
title_full_unstemmed Improved transformation efficiency in Mycoplasma hominis enables disruption of the MIB–MIP system targeting human immunoglobulins
title_short Improved transformation efficiency in Mycoplasma hominis enables disruption of the MIB–MIP system targeting human immunoglobulins
title_sort improved transformation efficiency in mycoplasma hominis enables disruption of the mib–mip system targeting human immunoglobulins
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10581049/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37737635
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.01873-23
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