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This allows for consecutive rounds of genome editing. Using this system, we engineered a strain with three major virulence factors deleted. The approaches developed here could potentially be adapted for use with other Gram-positive bacteria.IMPORTANCEStreptococcus pneumoniae (the pneumococcus) is an important opportunistic human pathogen killing more than 1 million people each year. Having the availability of a system capable of easy genome editing would significantly facilitate drug discovery and efforts to identify new vaccine candidates. Here, we introduced an easy-to-use system to perform multiple rounds of genome editing in the pneumococcus by putting the CRISPR-Cas9 system on a temperature-sensitive replicative plasmid. The approaches used here will advance genome editing projects in this important human pathogen.The bacterial hydrolytic dehalogenation of 4-chlorobenzoate (4CBA) is a coenzyme A (CoA)-activation-type catabolic pathway that is usually a common part of the microbial mineralization of chlorinated aromatic compounds. Previous studies have shown that the transport and dehalogenation genes for 4CBA are typically clustered as an fcbBAT1T2T3C operon and inducibly expressed in response to 4CBA. However, the associated molecular mechanism remains unknown. In this study, a gene (fcbR) adjacent to the fcb operon was predicted to encode a TetR-type transcriptional regulator in Comamonas sediminis strain CD-2. The fcbR knockout strain exhibited constitutive expression of the fcb cluster. In the host Escherichia coli, the expression of the Pfcb -fused green fluorescent protein (gfp) reporter was repressed by the introduction of the fcbR gene, and genetic studies combining various catabolic genes suggest that the ligand for FcbR may be an intermediate metabolite. Purified FcbR could bind to the Pfcb DNA probe in vitroed the transcriptional repressor and its cognate effector of a 4CBA hydrolytic dehalogenation operon. This work extends halogenated benzoyl-CoA as a new member of CoA-derived effector compounds that mediate allosteric regulation of transcriptional regulators.Pseudoalteromonas species produce a diverse range of biologically active compounds, including those biosynthesized by nonribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPSs) and polyketide synthases (PKSs). Here, we report the biochemical and genomic analysis of Pseudoalteromonas sp. strain HM-SA03, isolated from the blue-ringed octopus, Hapalochlaena sp. Genome mining for secondary metabolite pathways revealed seven putative NRPS/PKS biosynthesis gene clusters, including those for the biosynthesis of alterochromides, pseudoalterobactins, alteramides, and four novel compounds. Vismodegib Among these was a novel siderophore biosynthesis gene cluster with unprecedented architecture (NRPS-PKS-NRPS-PKS-NRPS-PKS-NRPS). Alterochromide production in HM-SA03 was also confirmed by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. An investigation of the biosynthetic potential of 42 publicly available Pseudoalteromonas genomes indicated that some of these gene clusters are distributed throughout the genus. Through the phylogenetic analysis, a particularnary biosynthetic potential. While our results do not support a role of HM-SA03 in Hapalochalaena sp. venom (tetrodotoxin) production, they emphasize the untapped potential of Pseudoalteromonas as a source of novel natural products.Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) presenting spa type t899 is commonly associated with sequence type 9 (ST9) but is also increasingly linked to ST398. This study provides genomic insight into the diversity of t899 isolates using core genome multilocus sequence typing (cgMLST), single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP)-based phylogeny, and the description of selected antimicrobial resistance and virulence markers. The SNP-based phylogenic tree showed that isolates sharing the same spa type (t899) but different STs highly diverged in their core and accessory genomes, revealing discriminant antimicrobial resistance (AMR) and virulence markers. Our results highlighted the idea that in a surveillance context where only spa typing is used, an additional multiplex PCR for the detection of the tet(M), sak, and seg genes would be valuable in helping distinguish ST9 from ST398 isolates on a routine basis.IMPORTANCE This study showed the genetic diversity and population structure of S. aureus presenting the same spa type, t899, but belonging to different STs. Our findings revealed that these isolates vary deeply in their core and accessory genomes, contrary to what is regularly inferred from studies using spa typing only. Given that identical spa types can be associated with different STs and that spa typing only is not appropriate for S. aureus isolates that have undergone major recombination events which include the passage of the spa gene (such as in t899-positive MRSA), the combination of both MLST and spa typing methods is recommended. However, spa typing alone is still largely used in surveillance studies and basic characterization. Our data suggest that additional markers, such as tet(M), sak, and seg genes, could be implemented in an easy and inexpensive manner in order to identify S. aureus lineages with a higher accuracy.Vibrio species, including the squid symbiont Vibrio fischeri, become competent to take up DNA under specific conditions. For example, V. fischeri becomes competent when grown in the presence of chitin oligosaccharides or upon overproduction of the competence regulatory factor TfoX. While little is known about the regulatory pathway(s) that controls V. fischeri competence, this microbe encodes homologs of factors that control competence in the well-studied V. cholerae To further develop V. fischeri as a genetically tractable organism, we evaluated the roles of some of these competence homologs. Using TfoX-overproducing cells, we found that competence depends upon LitR, the homolog of V. cholerae master quorum-sensing and competence regulator HapR, and upon homologs of putative pilus genes that in V. cholerae facilitate DNA uptake. Disruption of genes for negative regulators upstream of LitR, namely, the LuxO protein and the small RNA (sRNA) Qrr1, resulted in increased transformation frequencies. Unlike LitR-controlled light production, however, competence did not vary with cell density under tfoX overexpression conditions.

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