Genes And Genomes

Insertion site and distribution of a genomic island conferring DNA phosphorothioation in the Mycobacterium abscessus complex

  • 1Department of Microbiology, The University of Texas Health Science Center at Tyler, 11937 U.S. Highway 271, Tyler, TX, USA
  • 2Mycobacteria/Nocardia Laboratory, The University of Texas Health Science Center at Tyler, 11937 U.S. Highway 271, Tyler, TX, USA
  • Correspondence
    Susan T. Howard sthoward1{at}sbcglobal.net or susan.howard{at}uthct.edu
  • Microbiology 2013; 159(Pt 11):2323–2332 · https://doi.org/10.1099/mic.0.070318-0

    View at publisher PubMed

    Abstract

    Nearly half of US clinical isolates of the emerging pathogen Mycobacterium abscessus were reported to exhibit smeared DNA during PFGE. This DNA degradation (Dnd) phenotype results from DNA phosphorothioation, a sulfur modification found in other bacteria and conferred by dnd genes located on mobile elements. Putative dnd genes are located on a 19.6 kbp genomic island (GI) in the M. abscessus type strain ATCC 19977. We confirmed that ATCC 19977T is Dnd-positive by PFGE and we developed a PCR assay to predict Dnd phenotype. Dnd-positive strains generated an amplicon from dndC whereas Dnd-negative strains generated a bridge amplicon that spanned the GI insertion site, indicating they lacked the entire ‘Dnd-GI’. Comparative analyses of sequences from the bridge amplicon with ATCC 19977T revealed the Dnd-GI is flanked by 22 bp repeats in M. abscessus sensu stricto and inserted downstream of a tRNA-Ala gene and between inverted repeats. Regions flanking the Dnd-GI were highly conserved within the M. abscessus complex. Bioinformatics studies suggest the Dnd-GI inserted independently into a strain of Mycobacterium massiliense and that other species of mycobacteria also have dnd genes, supporting reports that the Dnd phenotype is common among actinomycetes. Within the M. abscessus complex, Dnd-positive clinical isolates were primarily M. abscessus sensu stricto, and tandem repeat typing indicated these isolates were highly related, confirming previous PFGE studies and revealing a widespread family of strains with significance in human disease.

    • The GenBank/EMBL/DDBJ accession numbers for the dndC gene sequences reported here are KF198805–KF198810, and for the regions in Dnd-negative strains that correspond to the Dnd-GI insertion site are KF198811–KF198818.

    • Two supplementary figures are available with the online version of this paper.

    • Edited by: R. Manganelli

    Abbreviations:
    Dnd
    DNA degradation
    DR
    direct repeat
    GI
    genomic island
    TR
    tandem repeat
    VNTR
    variable number tandem repeat