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CRISPR-Cas Controls Cryptic Prophages

The bacterial archetypal adaptive immune system, CRISPR-Cas, is thought to be repressed in the best-studied bacterium, Escherichia coli K-12. We show here that the E. coli CRISPR-Cas system is active and serves to inhibit its nine defective (i.e., cryptic) prophages. Specifically, compared to the wi...

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Autores principales: Song, Sooyeon, Semenova, Ekaterina, Severinov, Konstantin, Fernández-García, Laura, Benedik, Michael J., Maeda, Toshinari, Wood, Thomas K.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9782134/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36555835
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms232416195
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author Song, Sooyeon
Semenova, Ekaterina
Severinov, Konstantin
Fernández-García, Laura
Benedik, Michael J.
Maeda, Toshinari
Wood, Thomas K.
author_facet Song, Sooyeon
Semenova, Ekaterina
Severinov, Konstantin
Fernández-García, Laura
Benedik, Michael J.
Maeda, Toshinari
Wood, Thomas K.
author_sort Song, Sooyeon
collection PubMed
description The bacterial archetypal adaptive immune system, CRISPR-Cas, is thought to be repressed in the best-studied bacterium, Escherichia coli K-12. We show here that the E. coli CRISPR-Cas system is active and serves to inhibit its nine defective (i.e., cryptic) prophages. Specifically, compared to the wild-type strain, reducing the amounts of specific interfering RNAs (crRNA) decreases growth by 40%, increases cell death by 700%, and prevents persister cell resuscitation. Similar results were obtained by inactivating CRISPR-Cas by deleting the entire 13 spacer region (CRISPR array); hence, CRISPR-Cas serves to inhibit the remaining deleterious effects of these cryptic prophages, most likely through CRISPR array-derived crRNA binding to cryptic prophage mRNA rather than through cleavage of cryptic prophage DNA, i.e., self-targeting. Consistently, four of the 13 E. coli spacers contain complementary regions to the mRNA sequences of seven cryptic prophages, and inactivation of CRISPR-Cas increases the level of mRNA for lysis protein YdfD of cryptic prophage Qin and lysis protein RzoD of cryptic prophage DLP-12. In addition, lysis is clearly seen via transmission electron microscopy when the whole CRISPR-Cas array is deleted, and eliminating spacer #12, which encodes crRNA with complementary regions for DLP-12 (including rzoD), Rac, Qin (including ydfD), and CP4-57 cryptic prophages, also results in growth inhibition and cell lysis. Therefore, we report the novel results that (i) CRISPR-Cas is active in E. coli and (ii) CRISPR-Cas is used to tame cryptic prophages, likely through RNAi, i.e., unlike with active lysogens, active CRISPR-Cas and cryptic prophages may stably co-exist.
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spelling pubmed-97821342022-12-24 CRISPR-Cas Controls Cryptic Prophages Song, Sooyeon Semenova, Ekaterina Severinov, Konstantin Fernández-García, Laura Benedik, Michael J. Maeda, Toshinari Wood, Thomas K. Int J Mol Sci Article The bacterial archetypal adaptive immune system, CRISPR-Cas, is thought to be repressed in the best-studied bacterium, Escherichia coli K-12. We show here that the E. coli CRISPR-Cas system is active and serves to inhibit its nine defective (i.e., cryptic) prophages. Specifically, compared to the wild-type strain, reducing the amounts of specific interfering RNAs (crRNA) decreases growth by 40%, increases cell death by 700%, and prevents persister cell resuscitation. Similar results were obtained by inactivating CRISPR-Cas by deleting the entire 13 spacer region (CRISPR array); hence, CRISPR-Cas serves to inhibit the remaining deleterious effects of these cryptic prophages, most likely through CRISPR array-derived crRNA binding to cryptic prophage mRNA rather than through cleavage of cryptic prophage DNA, i.e., self-targeting. Consistently, four of the 13 E. coli spacers contain complementary regions to the mRNA sequences of seven cryptic prophages, and inactivation of CRISPR-Cas increases the level of mRNA for lysis protein YdfD of cryptic prophage Qin and lysis protein RzoD of cryptic prophage DLP-12. In addition, lysis is clearly seen via transmission electron microscopy when the whole CRISPR-Cas array is deleted, and eliminating spacer #12, which encodes crRNA with complementary regions for DLP-12 (including rzoD), Rac, Qin (including ydfD), and CP4-57 cryptic prophages, also results in growth inhibition and cell lysis. Therefore, we report the novel results that (i) CRISPR-Cas is active in E. coli and (ii) CRISPR-Cas is used to tame cryptic prophages, likely through RNAi, i.e., unlike with active lysogens, active CRISPR-Cas and cryptic prophages may stably co-exist. MDPI 2022-12-19 /pmc/articles/PMC9782134/ /pubmed/36555835 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms232416195 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Song, Sooyeon
Semenova, Ekaterina
Severinov, Konstantin
Fernández-García, Laura
Benedik, Michael J.
Maeda, Toshinari
Wood, Thomas K.
CRISPR-Cas Controls Cryptic Prophages
title CRISPR-Cas Controls Cryptic Prophages
title_full CRISPR-Cas Controls Cryptic Prophages
title_fullStr CRISPR-Cas Controls Cryptic Prophages
title_full_unstemmed CRISPR-Cas Controls Cryptic Prophages
title_short CRISPR-Cas Controls Cryptic Prophages
title_sort crispr-cas controls cryptic prophages
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9782134/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36555835
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms232416195
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AT benedikmichaelj crisprcascontrolscrypticprophages
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