Comprehensive Functional Analysis of the Enterococcus faecalis Core Genome Using an Ordered, Sequence-Defined Collection of Insertional Mutations in Strain OG1RF

Jennifer L. Dale(University of Minnesota Medical Center), Kenneth B. Beckman(University of Minnesota), Julia L. E. Willett(University of Minnesota Medical Center), Jennifer L. Nilson(University of Minnesota Medical Center), Nagendra P. Palani(University of Minnesota), Joshua A. Baller(University of Minnesota), Adam Hauge(University of Minnesota), Daryl M. Gohl(University of Minnesota), Raymond Erickson(University of Minnesota), Dawn A. Manias(University of Minnesota Medical Center), Michael J. Sadowsky(University of Minnesota), Gary M. Dunny(University of Minnesota Medical Center)
mSystems
September 10, 2018
Cited by 88Open Access
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Abstract

The robust ability of Enterococcus faecalis to survive outside the host and to spread via oral-fecal transmission and its high degree of intrinsic and acquired antimicrobial resistance all complicate the treatment of hospital-acquired enterococcal infections. The conserved E. faecalis core genome serves as an important genetic scaffold for evolution of this bacterium in the modern health care setting and also provides interesting vaccine and drug targets. We used an innovative pooling/sequencing strategy to map a large collection of arrayed transposon insertions in E. faecalis OG1RF and generated an arrayed library of defined mutants covering approximately 70% of the OG1RF genome. Then, we performed high-throughput transposon sequencing experiments using this library to determine core genomic determinants of bile resistance in OG1RF. This collection is a valuable resource for comprehensive, functional enterococcal genomics using both traditional and high-throughput approaches and enables immediate recovery of mutants of interest.


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