Publication | Open Access
Characterization of the nonenzymatic chloramphenicol resistance (cmlA) gene of the In4 integron of Tn1696: similarity of the product to transmembrane transport proteins
185
Citations
52
References
1991
Year
BacteriologyMolecular BiologyMolecular GeneticsTransport ProteinsDrug ResistanceMembrane TransportAntimicrobial ResistanceGene CassetteBiochemistryNonenzymatic Chloramphenicol ResistanceVirulence FactorDna ElementsMolecular MicrobiologyProtein TransportIn4 IntegronBiologyAntimicrobial Resistance GeneNatural SciencesMicrobiologyCellular BiochemistryMedicineCmla Gene Cassette
Integrons constitute a novel family of DNA elements which evolved by site-specific integration of discrete units between two conserved segments. On the In4 integron of Tn1696, a precisely inserted gene cassette of 1,549 bp conferring nonenzymatic chloramphenicol resistance (cmlA) is present between the streptomycin-spectinomycin resistance (aadA2) gene cassette and the 3'-conserved segment of the integron. In this study, we present the nucleotide sequence of the cmlA gene cassette of Tn1696, show its similarity to bacterial efflux systems and other transport proteins, and present evidence for alterations that its expression exerts on bacterial membranes. The cmlA gene cassette apparently carries its own promoter(s), a situation that has not heretofore been observed in the integrons of multiresistance plasmids and transposons of gram-negative bacteria. One or more of these promoters were shown to be functionally active in expressing a cat marker gene from promoter-probe vectors. The putative CmlA polypeptide appears to provoke a reduction of the content of the major porins OmpA and OmpC.
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