Removal of AMR plasmids using a mobile, broad host-range CRISPR-Cas9 delivery tool.
David Sünderhauf, Uli Klümper, Elizabeth Pursey, Edze R Westra, William H Gaze, Stineke van Houte
May 2023 Microbiology (Reading)Abstract
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) genes are widely disseminated on plasmids. Therefore, interventions aimed at blocking plasmid uptake and transfer may curb the spread of AMR. Previous studies have used CRISPR-Cas-based technology to remove plasmids encoding AMR genes from target bacteria, using either phage- or plasmid-based delivery vehicles that typically have narrow host ranges. To make this technology feasible for removal of AMR plasmids from multiple members of complex microbial communities, an efficient, broad host-range delivery vehicle is needed. We engineered the broad host-range IncP1-plasmid pKJK5 to encode programmed to target an AMR gene. We demonstrate that the resulting plasmid pKJK5::csg has the ability to block the uptake of AMR plasmids and to remove resident plasmids from . Furthermore, due to its broad host range, pKJK5::csg successfully blocked AMR plasmid uptake in a range of environmental, pig- and human-associated coliform isolates, as well as in isolates of two species of . This study firmly establishes pKJK5::csg as a promising broad host-range CRISPR-Cas9 delivery tool for AMR plasmid removal, which has the potential to be applied in complex microbial communities to remove AMR genes from a broad range of bacterial species.
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| Download Source 2 | http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10268836 | PMC |
| Download Source 3 | http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/mic.0.001334 | DOI Listing |