MicrobiologyOpen (Aug 2023)
Transforming the untransformable with knockout minicircles: High‐efficiency transformation and vector‐free allelic exchange knockout in the fish pathogen Photobacterium damselae
Abstract
Abstract Gene inactivation studies are critical in pathogenic bacteria, where insights into species biology can guide the development of vaccines and treatments. Allelic exchange via homologous recombination is a generic method of targeted gene editing in bacteria. However, generally applicable protocols are lacking, and suboptimal approaches are often used for nonstandard but epidemiologically important species. Photobacterium damselae subsp. piscicida (Pdp) is a primary pathogen of fish in aquaculture and has been considered hard to transform since the mid‐1990s. Consequently, conjugative transfer of RK2/RP4 suicide vectors from Escherichia coli S17‐1/SM10 donor strains, a system prone to off‐target mutagenesis, was used to deliver the allelic exchange DNA in previous studies. Here we have achieved efficient electrotransformation in Pdp using a salt‐free highly concentrated sucrose solution, which performs as a hypertonic wash buffer, cryoprotectant, and electroporation buffer. High‐efficiency transformation has enabled vector‐free mutagenesis for which we have employed circular minimalistic constructs (knockout minicircles) containing only allelic exchange essentials that were generated by Gibson assembly. Preparation of competent cells using sucrose and electroporation/integration of minicircles had virtually no detectable off‐target promutagenic effect. In contrast, a downstream sacB selection apparently induced several large deletions via mobilization of transposable elements. Electroporation of minicircles into sucrose‐treated cells is a versatile broadly applicable approach that may facilitate allelic exchange in a wide range of microbial species. The method permitted inactivation of a primary virulence factor unique to Pdp, apoptogenic toxin AIP56, demonstrating the efficacy of minicircles for difficult KO targets located on the high copy number of small plasmids.
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