» Articles » PMID: 38561675

Detection and Classification of the Integrative Conjugative Elements of Lactococcus Lactis

Overview
Journal BMC Genomics
Publisher Biomed Central
Specialty Genetics
Date 2024 Apr 2
PMID 38561675
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Lactococcus lactis is widely applied by the dairy industry for the fermentation of milk into products such as cheese. Adaptation of L. lactis to the dairy environment often depends on functions encoded by mobile genetic elements (MGEs) such as plasmids. Other L. lactis MGEs that contribute to industrially relevant traits like antimicrobial production and carbohydrate utilization capacities belong to the integrative conjugative elements (ICE). Here we investigate the prevalence of ICEs in L. lactis using an automated search engine that detects colocalized, ICE-associated core-functions (involved in conjugation or mobilization) in lactococcal genomes. This approach enabled the detection of 36 candidate-ICEs in 69 L. lactis genomes. By phylogenetic analysis of conserved protein functions encoded in all lactococcal ICEs, these 36 ICEs could be classified in three main ICE-families that encompass 7 distinguishable ICE-integrases and are characterized by apparent modular-exchangeability and plasticity. Finally, we demonstrate that phylogenetic analysis of the conjugation-associated VirB4 ATPase function differentiates ICE- and plasmid-derived conjugation systems, indicating that conjugal transfer of lactococcal ICEs and plasmids involves genetically distinct machineries. Our genomic analysis and sequence-based classification of lactococcal ICEs creates a comprehensive overview of the conserved functional repertoires encoded by this family of MGEs in L. lactis, which can facilitate the future exploitation of the functional traits they encode by ICE mobilization to appropriate starter culture strains.

Citing Articles

The lactococcal ICE-ome encodes a repertoire of exchangeable traits with potential industrial relevance.

van der Els S, Boekhorst J, Bron P, Kleerebezem M BMC Genomics. 2024; 25(1):734.

PMID: 39080539 PMC: 11288074. DOI: 10.1186/s12864-024-10646-y.

References
1.
Guglielmini J, Quintais L, Garcillan-Barcia M, de la Cruz F, Rocha E . The repertoire of ICE in prokaryotes underscores the unity, diversity, and ubiquity of conjugation. PLoS Genet. 2011; 7(8):e1002222. PMC: 3158045. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1002222. View

2.
Johnson C, Grossman A . Integrative and Conjugative Elements (ICEs): What They Do and How They Work. Annu Rev Genet. 2015; 49:577-601. PMC: 5180612. DOI: 10.1146/annurev-genet-112414-055018. View

3.
Guedon G, Lao J, Payot S, Lacroix T, Chiapello H, Leblond-Bourget N . FirmiData: a set of 40 genomes of Firmicutes with a curated annotation of ICEs and IMEs. BMC Res Notes. 2022; 15(1):157. PMC: 9092696. DOI: 10.1186/s13104-022-06036-w. View

4.
Wallden K, Rivera-Calzada A, Waksman G . Type IV secretion systems: versatility and diversity in function. Cell Microbiol. 2010; 12(9):1203-12. PMC: 3070162. DOI: 10.1111/j.1462-5822.2010.01499.x. View

5.
Bellanger X, Morel C, Decaris B, Guedon G . Derepression of excision of integrative and potentially conjugative elements from Streptococcus thermophilus by DNA damage response: implication of a cI-related repressor. J Bacteriol. 2006; 189(4):1478-81. PMC: 1797353. DOI: 10.1128/JB.01125-06. View