In 1961, shortly after the introduction of methicillin, methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) was reported in England (
18). MRSA soon became a serious problem challenging hospital infection control throughout the world (
4). MRSA expresses methicillin resistance by producing a specific penicillin-binding protein, PBP2′ (or PBP2a), that has a decreased binding affinity to β-lactam antibiotics (
13,
30,
48). The genetic determinant of methicillin resistance (
mec) has been localized on the chromosome of
S. aureus (
36) and mapped to a locus between the genes encoding protein A (
spa) and a protein involved in the biosynthesis of purine (
purA) (
19). The
mecA gene encoding PBP2′ has been cloned from a Japanese MRSA strain by exploiting a tobramycin resistance gene which is closely linked to
mecA as a selective marker, and its sequence was determined (
38). The
mecA gene is adjoined by a set of regulatory genes,
mecI and
mecR1, forming the
mecA gene complex (
mecI-mecR1-mecA), though in some strains the set is partially deleted and only the 5′-portion of the
mecR1 gene is left beside the
mecA gene (Δ
mecR1-mecA) (
2,
14,
20,
24). The
mecA gene complex (and its deleted version) is widely distributed among
S. aureusspecies as well as among other staphylococcal species collectively called coagulase-negative staphylococci (C-NS) (
17,
31,
42,
43). Therefore, it has been speculated that
mec may be freely transmissible among staphylococcal species, crossing the staphylococcal species barrier (
3,
42). With classical genetic experiments, it was shown that
mec is not transferable between
S. aureus strains by conjugation (
21) but is transferable by bacteriophage-mediated generalized transduction (
10). Subsequently, Trees and Iandolo reported that
mec could be mobilized from the chromosome to a penicillinase plasmid, pI524, and suggested the possibility that
mec may comprise a part of a transposable genetic element (
46). In the 1980s, direct chromosome analysis of MRSA strains revealed that a substantial length of the chromosomal DNA segment (greater than 30 kb) carrying
mechas no allelic equivalence in methicillin-susceptible
S. aureus (MSSA) strains; the segment was called “additional DNA” or “
mec DNA” (
6,
7,
11,
37). However, the size, structure, and biological properties of
mec DNA have, until now, long remained unclear.
In this study, we report the first demarcation and determination of the structure of the mec DNA of a Japanese S. aureusstrain, N315.
DISCUSSION
The
mecA gene is known to be located between the markers
nov, encoding DNA gyrase, and
spa, encoding protein A, on the same
SmaI-generated chromosomal fragment in several different strains (
19,
27). In this study, we have determined the location and boundaries of
mecDNA.
mec DNA was found to be integrated inside
orfX, which is located on the
SmaI-G fragment of the
S. aureus type strain NCTC8325 (data not shown). We have tested strains by PCR with primers cR2 and cR6 (Fig.
3), and we found that the
orfX is present in all 55
S. aureusstrains (13 MSSA strains and 42 MRSA strains) tested so far. Therefore,
orfX seems to have an essential function in the
S. aureus genome. The preservation of the reading frame of
orfX even after integration of
mec DNA in N315 further supports its importance. However, its function cannot be inferred from the amino acid sequence since there is no homologue whose function has been elucidated in the database.
The structural features of the boundaries of
mec DNA, which might reflect the integration mechanism of
mec DNA were (i) the presence of terminal inverted repeats of 27-bp length and (ii) the presence of direct repeats of 15-bp length: one of the latter was situated in the right extremity of
mec DNA, and the other was situated outside
mec DNA and abutting the left boundary. The presence of terminal inverted repeats and duplication of target sequences are characteristic features of most transposons. There were no direct repeats, however, reflecting the target duplication around
mec DNA. The characteristic deployment of the direct repeats found inside and outside the
mec DNA is reminiscent of cassette gene integration of an integron (
29,
39). However, no ORF possibly encoding integrase, like that characteristically found in the integron machinery, was found in the chromosomal area around
attB. Therefore, the structural features at the boundaries of
mec DNA suggested that
mec DNA is integrated into the chromosome by an as yet unknown recombination process.
As a possible mobile genetic element, the size (52 kb) of
mec DNA was comparable only to those of bacteriophages, conjugative transposons, or a pathogenicity island (PI). PIs, large (35 to 190 kb) chromosomal DNA segments each carrying a cluster of genes encoding virulence factors, have recently been identified in various gram-negative enteric bacteria (
22). However,
mecDNA did not carry structural genes (or their remnants) encoding head or tail proteins of bacteriophages or any ORFs predictably encoding any virulence factors as far as we could judge from the homology search over extant gene products. It also lacked
tra gene complexes, which are crucial components for the intercellular transfer of conjugative transposons (
9,
28). Therefore,
mec DNA was distinct from any of the above-described genetic elements.
The
mec DNA of N315 carried a total of 28 ORFs whose encoded functions were inferable based on the homology search. The seven genes associated with antibiotic resistance,
mecI,
mecR1,
mecA,
spc,
ermA,
ble, and
aadD, had intact coding frames. Of the rest of the ORFs, however, 13 appeared to be incomplete (Table
1). Prior to the disruption of the coding frames, these ORFs might have encoded products with physiological functions in a bacterial chromosome like those encoded by housekeeping genes; e.g., the
kdpoperon gene homologues might have engaged in ATP-dependent potassium transport, and the
xylR gene homologue might have been involved in xylose metabolism. It is possible that some of these ORFs were located along with
mecA gene complex on the chromosome of the bacterium from which the primordial
mec DNA originated and subsequently were mutated or disrupted during the process of molecular evolution of
mec DNA into its present structure. While the
mecA gene complex has remained intact, as it conferred selective advantage to the host cell (i.e., β-lactam resistance), most of the housekeeping genes carried by the primordial
mec DNA may have been disrupted because they were redundant or even toxic in the foreign physiological milieu of some staphylococcal species to which the
mec DNA had been transferred.
Besides antibiotic resistance genes, all the three transposase genes,
tnpA,
tnpB, and
tnpC, encoding proteins involved in the movement of Tn
554, were found to be intact. This indicates that the transposon was integrated later than other pseudogenes during the process of formation of the
mecDNA in its present form in N315. Tn
554 has been identified not only in
S. aureus but also in other C-NS species (
45). Recently, we found a methicillin-resistant
S. epidermidis strain, G3, on whose
mec DNA a copy of Tn
554 is found at exactly the same location relative to the
mecA gene complex as that in
mec DNA of N315 (
17a). Therefore, it is probable that the copy of Tn
554 is transferable as an integrated member of the
mec DNA between
S. aureus and other staphylococcal species.
The plasmid pUB110, also carrying two intact drug resistance genes, may also have been acquired relatively recently as compared to the pseudogenes. The integrated copy of pUB110 was flanked by two IS
431 (
25). IS
431 is postulated to serve as a portal of entry of the transposons or plasmids carrying various antibiotic resistance genes into MRSA chromosome. The repertoire of resistance genes accumulated by the IS
431-mediated recombination differs from strain to strain; for example, plasmid pT181 (carrying tetracycline resistance) and a mercury resistance gene have been found in an Australian MRSA strain (
11). However, there also exist MRSA strains with no other antibiotic resistance genes associated with IS
431mec. NCTC10442, the first MRSA strain isolated in the world, in England in 1961, is one such strain carrying the intact copy of IS
431mec, but no other resistance gene is associated with it (
17b). Therefore, the diversification of
mecDNA by accumulation of resistance genes via IS
431-mediated recombination may have occurred rather recently, probably after the establishment of
mec DNA in the chromosome of
S. aureus. A mutation was found in the
rep gene of pUB110. The gene encodes replication of the plasmid. Therefore, the mutation might have served for the stabilization of the integrated copy of pUB110 after its integration into the chromosome of N315.
It is interesting that the
mecA gene of N315 had quite a few nucleotide sequence differences from those previously reported in other strains (
38) but was identical to that in
S. epidermidis (
31). As opposed to other MRSA strains, N315 is a pre-MRSA, in which transcription of
mecA gene is strongly repressed by the
mecI gene-encoded repressor function (
20). Assuming that the direction of
mecA gene transfer was from other staphylococcal species to
S. aureus, as proposed by Archer (
2), it is an attractive hypothesis that N315 retains the
mecA gene in its more original form, which subsequently was mutated in MRSA cells to adapt to the
S. aureus-specific cell wall synthesis machinery.
The two ORFs, N034 and N037, which showed homology to site-specific recombinases belonging to the invertase-resolvase family were found in the midst of
mec DNA. Invertases are a well-known cause of DNA rearrangement in bacterial chromosomes or phage genomes resulting in the alteration of gene expression; e.g., Hin causes the phase transition from one flagellar antigen to another in
Salmonella, and Gin, Cin, and Pin cause the inversion of specific DNA segments of bacteriophages which control their host ranges (
12). Resolvases of the Tn
3 type, also a member of the resolvase-invertase family, bind to the resolution site and accomplish transposition by resolving cointegrate (an intermediate of transposition) into two independent replicons (
35). Most DNA invertases and resolvases are 180 to 190 aa in size and have a well-defined two-domain structure (
1,
35). Although the predicted sizes of N034 and N037 are about two to three times larger than the site-specific recombinases of the invertase-resolvase family, the N-terminal thirds of the two proteins have substantial homology with the N-terminal domains of recombinases of the invertase-resolvase family; the domains are implicated in the strand-exchange function of site-specific recombination. The nested-PCR and sequencing experiment performed by using primers bracketing the
attB sequence indicated that a recombination enzyme that can precisely excise
mec DNA out of the chromosome is encoded on the N315 genome. The enzyme(s) responsible for the spontaneous
mec DNA excision is thought to be a novel site-specific recombinase. In this regard, the ORFs N034 and N037 are good candidates for the genes responsible for the
mec DNA-specific excision. Experiments are under way to clarify the function(s) of the products of the two ORFs.