Improving the Efficiency of Transposon Mutagenesis in Salmonella Enteritidis by Overcoming Host-Restriction Barriers

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Abstract

Transposon mutagenesis using transposome complex is a powerful method for functional genomics analysis in diverse bacteria by creating a large number of random mutants to prepare a genome-saturating mutant library. However, strong host restriction barriers can lead to limitations with species- or strain-specific restriction-modification systems. The purpose of this study was to enhance the transposon mutagenesis efficiency of Salmonella Enteritidis to generate a larger number of random insertion mutants. Host-adapted Tn5 DNA was used to form a transposome complex, and this simple approach significantly and consistently improved the efficiency of transposon mutagenesis, resulting in a 46-fold increase in the efficiency as compared to non-adapted transposon DNA fragments. Random nature of Tn5 insertions was confirmed by high-throughput sequencing of the Tn5-junction sequences. The result based on S. Enteritidis in this study should find broad applications in preparing a comprehensive mutant library of other species using transposome complex.

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Dawoud, T. M., Jiang, T., Mandal, R. K., Ricke, S. C., & Kwon, Y. M. (2014). Improving the Efficiency of Transposon Mutagenesis in Salmonella Enteritidis by Overcoming Host-Restriction Barriers. Molecular Biotechnology, 56(11), 1004–1010. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12033-014-9779-4

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