Small deletion variants of the replication protein, π, and their potential for over-replication-based antimicrobial activity

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Abstract

The emergence of multiply antibiotic-resistant microorganisms in the environment has become a serious public health threat. To address this, our lab has devised a methodology in which antimicrobial agents are transferred into unwanted cells using the process of bacterial conjugation. In the work described here, we pursued proteins that cause plasmid over-replication as potential antimicrobial agents. Our focus was on the pir-encoded π protein of plasmid R6K that possesses both positive and negative functions in controlling γ origin-based replication. We observed that three of four pir mutations examined, including two in-frame deletions, severely impaired negative plasmid-replication control. The resulting over-replication phenotype was particularly strong when a pir mutant was placed in cis to γ origin. In conjugative mating experiments with several representatives of the family Enterobacteriaceae, the plasmids expressed postconjugational antimicrobial activity. The potential utility of a conjugation-based antimicrobial approach is discussed. Additionally, we describe the replication inhibitory function of a novel and useful Rep protein variant, π•M36A∧M38A, which binds iteron DNA exclusively as dimers. © 2006 Federation of European Microbiological Societies. Published by Blackwell Publishing Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Peng, Y., Rakowski, S. A., & Filutowicz, M. (2006). Small deletion variants of the replication protein, π, and their potential for over-replication-based antimicrobial activity. FEMS Microbiology Letters, 261(2), 245–252. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1574-6968.2006.00364.x

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