V

Vı́ctor de Lorenzo

Centro Nacional de Biotecnología

ORCID: 0000-0002-6041-2731

Publishes on Bacterial Genetics and Biotechnology, Microbial Metabolic Engineering and Bioproduction, Bacteriophages and microbial interactions. 591 papers and 35.3k citations.

591Publications
35.3kTotal Citations

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Transposon vectors containing non-antibiotic resistance selection markers for cloning and stable chromosomal insertion of foreign genes in gram-negative bacteria
Cited by 1.6kOpen Access

A simple procedure for cloning and stable insertion of foreign genes into the chromosomes of gram-negative eubacteria was developed by combining in two sets of plasmids (i) the transposition features of Tn10 and Tn5; (ii) the resistances to the herbicide bialaphos, to mercuric salts and organomercurial compounds, and to arsenite, and (iii) the suicide delivery properties of the R6K-based plasmid pGP704. The resulting constructions contained unique NotI or SfiI sites internal to either the Tn10 or the Tn5 inverted repeats. These sites were readily used for cloning DNA fragments with the help of two additional specialized cloning plasmids, pUC18Not and pUC18Sfi. The newly derived constructions could be maintained only in donor host strains that produce the R6K-specified pi protein, which is an essential replication protein for R6K and plasmids derived therefrom. Donor plasmids containing hybrid transposons were transformed into a specialized lambda pir lysogenic Escherichia coli strain with a chromosomally integrated RP4 that provided broad-host-range conjugal transfer functions. Delivery of the donor plasmids into selected host bacteria was accomplished through mating with the target strain. Transposition of the hybrid transposon from the delivered suicide plasmid to a replicon in the target cell was mediated by the cognate transposase encoded on the plasmid at a site external to the transposon. Since the transposase function was not maintained in target cells, such cells were not immune to further transposition rounds. Multiple insertions in the same strain are therefore only limited by the availability of distinct selection markers. The utility of the system was demonstrated with a kanamycin resistance gene as a model foreign insert into Pseudomonas putida and a melanin gene from Streptomyces antibioticus into Klebsiella pneumoniae. Because of the modular nature of the functional parts of the cloning vectors, they can be easily modified and further selection markers can be incorporated. The cloning system described here will be particularly useful for the construction of hybrid bacteria that stably maintain inserted genes, perhaps in competitive situations (e.g., in open systems and natural environments), and that do not carry antibiotic resistance markers characteristic of most available cloning vectors (as is currently required of live bacterial vaccines).

Mini-Tn5 transposon derivatives for insertion mutagenesis, promoter probing, and chromosomal insertion of cloned DNA in gram-negative eubacteria
Vı́ctor de Lorenzo, Marta Herrero, Ute Jakubzik et al.|Journal of Bacteriology|1990
Cited by 1.5kOpen Access

A collection of Tn5-derived minitransposons has been constructed that simplifies substantially the generation of insertion mutants, in vivo fusions with reporter genes, and the introduction of foreign DNA fragments into the chromosome of a variety of gram-negative bacteria, including the enteric bacteria and typical soil bacteria like Pseudomonas species. The minitransposons consist of genes specifying resistance to kanamycin, chloramphenicol, streptomycin-spectinomycin, and tetracycline as selection markers and a unique NotI cloning site flanked by 19-base-pair terminal repeat sequences of Tn5. Further derivatives also contain lacZ, phoA, luxAB, or xylE genes devoid of their native promoters located next to the terminal repeats in an orientation that affords the generation of gene-operon fusions. The transposons are located on a R6K-based suicide delivery plasmid that provides the IS50R transposase tnp gene in cis but external to the mobile element and whose conjugal transfer to recipients is mediated by RP4 mobilization functions in the donor.

Opening the Iron Box: Transcriptional Metalloregulation by the Fur Protein
Cited by 805Open Access

It is generally accepted that iron is the most important micronutrient used by bacteria. With members of the family Lactobacillae being the only exceptions so far (3), this metal is essential for cellular metabolism, since it is needed as a cofactor for a large number of enzymes (96). However, this element is not easily available to microorganisms in aerobic environments. While in anaerobic conditions Fe2+ is soluble at physiological pH and cells obtain iron without much difficulty from the external medium, the ion becomes quickly converted to Fe3+ upon exposure to oxygen and forms insoluble hydroxides at neutral pH, making the available metal very scarce (20). In order to acquire iron from the extracellular medium, virtually all aerobic bacteria produce and secrete low-molecular-weight compounds termed siderophores (sideros phoros, iron carriers). These compounds chelate Fe3+ with high affinity and specificity (68). Subsequently, the cell recovers the ferrisiderophore complexes through specific outer membrane receptors (30). Some of these high-affinity systems of iron uptake are important virulence factors in bacteria infecting animal fluids and tissues because they can chelate the metal bound to host proteins (7, 36, 60, 71). Furthermore, because iron availability is generally growth limiting for bacteria thriving in an animal millieu, the lack of the metal is a major environmental signal to trigger expression of virulence determinants (60). However, an excess of iron is toxic because of its ability to catalyse Fenton reactions and formation of active species of oxygen. Iron uptake has to be, therefore, exquisitely regulated to maintain the intracellular concentration of the metal between desirable limits. Considering that excretion mechanisms for iron are not known in bacteria, microorganisms appear to control iron homeostasis, regulating its transport through the membrane (5, 21).

The Standard European Vector Architecture (SEVA): a coherent platform for the analysis and deployment of complex prokaryotic phenotypes
Cited by 716Open Access

The 'Standard European Vector Architecture' database (SEVA-DB, http://seva.cnb.csic.es) was conceived as a user-friendly, web-based resource and a material clone repository to assist in the choice of optimal plasmid vectors for de-constructing and re-constructing complex prokaryotic phenotypes. The SEVA-DB adopts simple design concepts that facilitate the swapping of functional modules and the extension of genome engineering options to microorganisms beyond typical laboratory strains. Under the SEVA standard, every DNA portion of the plasmid vectors is minimized, edited for flaws in their sequence and/or functionality, and endowed with physical connectivity through three inter-segment insulators that are flanked by fixed, rare restriction sites. Such a scaffold enables the exchangeability of multiple origins of replication and diverse antibiotic selection markers to shape a frame for their further combination with a large variety of cargo modules that can be used for varied end-applications. The core collection of constructs that are available at the SEVA-DB has been produced as a starting point for the further expansion of the formatted vector platform. We argue that adoption of the SEVA format can become a shortcut to fill the phenomenal gap between the existing power of DNA synthesis and the actual engineering of predictable and efficacious bacteria.