Oral Presentation Australian Society for Microbiology Annual Scientific Meeting 2014

Bacitracin resistance is encoded on a novel mobile element from Clostridium perfringens (#21)

Xiaoyan Han 1 , Xiang-Dang Du 1 2 , Luke Southey 1 , Dieter M Bulach 1 , Torsten Seemann 1 , Xu-Xia Yan 1 , Trudi L Bannam 1 , Julian I Rood 1
  1. Monash University, Clayton, Vic, Australia
  2. College of Animal Husbandry and Veterinary Medicine, Henan Agricultural University, Zhengzhou, Henan, P. R. China
Bacitracins are a mixture of structurally related cyclic polypeptides with clinically useful antibiotic properties. They act by indirectly interfering with the biosynthesis of the bacterial cell wall. In this study, we analysed an avian necrotic enteritis strain of Clostridium perfringens that was resistant to bacitracin. We identified a putative bacitracin resistance locus that resembles a bacitracin resistance determinant from Enterococcus faecalis. It contained the structural genes bcrABD and a putative regulatory gene, bcrR. Mutagenesis studies showed that both bcrA and bcrB were essential for bacitracin resistance. The introduction of shuttle plasmids carrying bcrA, bcrB, bcrAB or bcrRAB into a bacitracin susceptible C. perfringens strain confirmed that both bcrA and bcrB were required for bacitracin resistance. Analysis of the plasmid DNA content of the parent strain showed that it contained at least three large conjugative plasmids and that the bcrRABD locus was located on an 89 kb conjugative plasmid. This plasmid was sequenced and shown to be closely related to members of the conjugative antibiotic resistance and toxin plasmid family from C. perfringens. Our analysis revealed that the bcr genes were located on a potential mobile element (Tn4460) that was related to the Tn916 family of conjugative transposons and encoded homologues of the Tn916 gene products that are responsible for recombination, regulation and conjugation. Subsequent conjugation experiments suggested that the Tn4460 bacitracin resistance element had the ability to transpose onto both conjugative and non-conjugative plasmids or onto the chromosome. In summary, we have identified and characterised a novel mobile bacitracin resistance determinant in a toxin-producing C. perfringens strain, the first such element to be identified in this bacterium.