Polar Effects of Transposon Insertion into a Minimal Bacterial Genome

J Bacteriol. 2019 Sep 6;201(19):e00185-19. doi: 10.1128/JB.00185-19. Print 2019 Oct 1.

Abstract

Global transposon mutagenesis is a valuable tool for identifying genes required for cell viability. Here we present a global analysis of the orientation of viable Tn5-Puror (Tn5-puromycin resistance) insertions into the near-minimal bacterial genome of JCVI-syn2.0. Sixteen of the 478 protein-coding genes show a noticeable asymmetry in the orientation of disrupting insertions of Tn5-Puror Ten of these are located in operons, upstream of essential or quasi-essential genes. Inserts transcribed in the same direction as the downstream gene are favored, permitting read-through transcription of the essential or quasi-essential gene. Some of these genes were classified as quasi-essential solely because of polar effects on the expression of downstream genes. Three genes showing asymmetry in Tn5-Puror insertion orientation prefer the orientation that avoids collisions between read-through transcription of Tn5-Puror and transcription of an adjacent gene. One gene (JCVISYN2_0132 [abbreviated here as "_0132"]) shows a strong preference for Tn5-Puror insertions transcribed upstream, away from the downstream nonessential gene _0133. This suggested that expression of _0133 due to read-through from Tn5-Puror is lethal when _0132 function is disrupted by transposon insertion. This led to the identification of genes _0133 and _0132 as a toxin-antitoxin pair. The three remaining genes show read-through transcription of Tn5-Puror directed downstream and away from sizable upstream intergenic regions (199 bp to 363 bp), for unknown reasons. In summary, polar effects of transposon insertion can, in a few cases, affect the classification of genes as essential, quasi-essential, or nonessential and sometimes can give clues to gene function.IMPORTANCE In studies of the minimal genetic requirements for life, we used global transposon mutagenesis to identify genes needed for a minimal bacterial genome. Transposon insertion can disrupt the function of a gene but can also have polar effects on the expression of adjacent genes. In the Tn5-Puror construct used in our studies, read-through transcription from Tn5-Puror can drive expression of downstream genes. This results in a preference for Tn5-Puror insertions transcribed toward a downstream essential or quasi-essential gene within the same operon. Such polar effects can have an impact on the classification of genes as essential, quasi-essential, or nonessential, but this has been observed in only a few cases. Also, polar effects of Tn5-Puror insertion can sometimes give clues to gene function.

Keywords: minimal cell; polarity; transposon mutagenesis.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Bacteria / genetics*
  • Bacterial Proteins / genetics*
  • DNA Transposable Elements
  • Genome, Bacterial
  • Mutagenesis, Insertional / methods*
  • Transcription, Genetic

Substances

  • Bacterial Proteins
  • DNA Transposable Elements