4.4 Article

Functional characterization of a cadmium resistance operon in Staphylococcus aureus ATCC12600: CadC does not function as a repressor

Journal

JOURNAL OF BASIC MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 55, Issue 2, Pages 148-159

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1002/jobm.201400498

Keywords

Staphylococcus aureus; Cadmium resistance; CadC; Cadmium efflux system accessory protein; Heavy metal resistance

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Funding

  1. Merck-AAAS grant
  2. Beckman Coulter, Inc. Genomics Educational Matching Grant

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Sequencing of a cadmium resistance operon from a Staphylococcus aureus ATCC12600 plasmid revealed that it is identical to a cadCA operon found in MRSA strains. Compared to plasmid-cured and cadC-mutant strains, cadC-positive ATCC12600 cells had increased resistance to cadmium (1mgml(-1) cadmium sulfate) and zinc (4mgml(-1) zinc sulfate), but not to other metal ions. After growth in media containing 20 mu gml(-1) cadmium sulfate, cadC-mutant cells contained more intracellular cadmium than cadC-positive ATCC12600 cells, suggesting that cadC absence results in impaired cadmium efflux. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays were performed with CadC proteins encoded by the S. aureus ATCC12600 plasmid and by the cadC gene of pI258, which is known to act as a transcriptional repressor and shares only 47% protein sequence identity with ATCC12600 CadC. Mobility shifts occurred when pI258 CadC protein was incubated with the promoter DNA-regions from the pI258 and S. aureus ATCC12600 cadCA operons, but did not occur with S. aureus ATCC12600 CadC protein, indicating that the ATCC12600 CadC protein does not interact with promoter region DNA. This cadCA operon, found in MRSA strains and previously functionally uncharacterized, increases resistance to cadmium and zinc by an efflux mechanism, and CadC does not function as a transcriptional repressor.

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