Comprehensive Transposon Mutant Library of Pseudomonas aeruginosa

We have developed technologies for creating saturating libraries of sequence-defined transposon insertion mutants in which each strain is maintained. Phenotypic analysis of such libraries should provide a virtually complete identification of nonessential genes required for any process for which a su...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2003-11, Vol.100 (24), p.14339-14344
Hauptverfasser: Jacobs, Michael A., Alwood, Ashley, Thaipisuttikul, Iyarit, Spencer, David, Haugen, Eric, Ernst, Stephen, Will, Oliver, Kaul, Rajinder, Raymond, Christopher, Levy, Ruth, Chun-Rong, Liu, Guenthner, Donald, Bovee, Donald, Olson, Maynard V., Manoil, Colin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We have developed technologies for creating saturating libraries of sequence-defined transposon insertion mutants in which each strain is maintained. Phenotypic analysis of such libraries should provide a virtually complete identification of nonessential genes required for any process for which a suitable screen can be devised. The approach was applied to Pseudomonas aeruginosa, an opportunistic pathogen with a 6.3-Mbp genome. The library that was generated consists of 30,100 sequence-defined mutants, corresponding to an average of five insertions per gene. About 12% of the predicted genes of this organism lacked insertions; many of these genes are likely to be essential for growth on rich media. Based on statistical analyses and bioinformatic comparison to known essential genes in E. coli, we estimate that the actual number of essential genes is 300-400. Screening the collection for strains defective in two defined multigenic processes (twitching motility and prototrophic growth) identified mutants corresponding to nearly all genes expected from earlier studies. Thus, phenotypic analysis of the collection may produce essentially complete lists of genes required for diverse biological activities. The transposons used to generate the mutant collection have added features that should facilitate downstream studies of gene expression, protein localization, epistasis, and chromosome engineering.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.2036282100