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Infection and Immunity, July 2003, p. 4217-4221, Vol. 71, No. 7
0019-9567/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.71.7.4217-4221.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Asymmetrical Distribution of Neisseria Miniature Insertion Sequence DNA Repeats among Pathogenic and Nonpathogenic Neisseria Strains
Eliana De Gregorio, Chiara Abrescia, M. Stella Carlomagno, and Pier Paolo Di Nocera*
Dipartimento di Biologia e Patologia Cellulare e Molecolare, "L. Califano," Università degli Studi di Napoli Federico II, 80131 Naples, Italy
Received 31 January 2003/
Returned for modification 18 March 2003/
Accepted 27 March 2003

ABSTRACT
Neisseria miniature insertion sequences (
nemis) are miniature
DNA insertion sequences found in
Neisseria species. Out of 57
elements closely flanking cellular genes analyzed by PCR, most
were conserved in
Neisseria meningitidis but not in
N. lactamica strains. Since mRNAs spanning
nemis are processed by RNase III
at hairpins formed by element termini, gene sets could selectively
be regulated in meningococci at the posttranscriptional level.

TEXT
DNA repeats known as Correia (
4) or
Neisseria miniature insertion
sequences (
nemis [
9]) represent about 2% of
Neisseria meningitidis genomes (
10,
12). These elements mostly differ in the presence
and/or absence of a 50-bp long internal segment, contain terminal
inverted repeats (TIRs) of variable length (Fig.
1A), and induce
the specific duplication of the TA dinucleotide upon genomic
integration (
3,
8,
9).
nemis have no coding capacity, and whether
they are inactive remnants of larger mobile elements or can
still be mobilized by other insertion sequences is unknown.
Intriguingly, most repeats are found inserted close to open
reading frames (ORFs). Family members carry transcription initiation
(
2) and termination (
6) signals, and full-length elements contain
functional integration host factor sites (
3). These observations
suggest that
nemis may impinge on gene expression at the transcriptional
level. The finding that
N. meningitidis mRNAs spanning
nemis are processed by RNase III at hairpins that are formed by
nemis TIRs (
5,
9) allows one to hypothesize that
nemis influence the
level of expression of neighboring genes mostly by acting at
the posttranscriptional level.
nemis are (or have been) mobile
elements, and their distribution in sequenced neisserial genomes
is partly different (
8,
9). Hence, before concluding on the
base of whole-genome data (
10,
12) that the expression of specific
N. meningitidis genes could be regulated by
nemis-mediated RNase
III cleavage, we thought it important to verify the degree of
conservation of
nemis repeats in
N. meningitidis populations.
To this end, the position of a representative set of repeats
spread throughout the genomes of the
N. meningitidis MC58 (Fig.
1B) and Z2491 strains was monitored by PCR analyses in a variety
of meningococci and in three strains of the apathogenic species
N. lactamica (Table
1). The 57 elements selected are inserted
close to either the start or the end of neisserial ORFs (Fig.
2). Ten nanograms of DNA from each strain was amplified by using
the AmpliTaq DNA polymerase and 100 nanograms of 25- to 30-mers
complementary to DNA segments flanking each repeat that were
located 300 to 700 bp apart and were designed on the base of
sequence conservation among fully sequenced
N. meningitidis DNAs. Amplimers were resolved by electrophoresis on either 1.4%
agarose or 6% polyacrylamide gels, and some were sequenced by
the dideoxy chain termination method. In the FAM18 strain, whose
sequence is available (
http://www.sanger.ac.uk/Projects/N_meningitidis/seroC.shtml),the
presence of
nemis at sites of interest was monitored in silico
by BLAST searches (
1).
Data are summarized in Fig.
3. Size prediction of the PCR products
allowed easy classification of most DNA regions as either "empty"
(i.e., lacking
nemis) or "filled" (i.e., containing
nemis).
Amplimers selected for sequence analysis differed essentially
in the presence and/or absence of
nemis DNA that was replaced
in empty sites by TA, the target site duplicated at
nemis termini.
Two major types of variations emerge from our survey. At some
sites, long and short
nemis alternated among
N. meningitidis strains (see repeats 5, 7, 28, 48, 49, 50, and 55 in Fig.
3).
Such heterogeneity likely reflects recombination events that
occurred in one strain or a few and eventually spread in neisserial
populations by transformation-mediated DNA exchanges. Regions
marked by the number sign in Fig.
3 matched neither empty nor
filled sites in length and either contained or lacked
nemis DNA, as shown by Southern and/or sequence analyses. Size identities
exhibited by amplimers found in different strains (not shown)
suggest that most of these alternative intergenic regions plausibly
arose in one strain and were propagated to other clones by transformation.
On the whole, most of the tested repeats were fairly conserved
among meningococci belonging to different serogroups and/or
sequence types. Thirty-one of 57 elements were found at the
same relative position in all the
N. meningitidis strains analyzed;
11 of 57 were found in all but one or two strains. The degree
of conservation of the remaining 15 repeats ranged from 70 to
30%.
nemis were consistently more conserved in strains belonging
to hypervirulent lineages than in other meningococci (Fig.
3,
bottom panel). Interestingly, the distribution of empty sites
among strains is partly lineage specific. Thus, for example,
nemis 19, 20, and 42 were not found in strains of the ET-5 complex,
and
nemis 19 was also absent in strains of the L1 cluster.
nemis 55 was absent in lineage 4 strains;
nemis 51 was absent in strains
of both this lineage and the L1 cluster (Fig.
3).
The number of filled sites detected in N. lactamica genomes was surprisingly low. Only three repeats were found common to all the strains; 20 were conserved in one to two strains, but 34 were absent from all strains (Fig. 3). Data suggest that nemis may be approximately three times less abundant in N. lactamica than in N. meningitidis. According to in silico analyses, nemis are similarly underrepresented in N. gonorrhoeae strain F1090 (9), and it is intriguing that most N. meningitidis nemis-positive sites are nemis-negative sites in both N. lactamica and N. gonorrhoeae chromosomes (not shown). This would suggest that nemis arose in cells ancestral to the divergence of Neisseriae in pathogenic and apathogenic species and subsequently spread in a selective fashion in meningococci only.
Many N. lactamica regions, shown by Southern analyses to lack nemis DNA, are marked by the number sign. These regions not only differed in size from empty sites but varied also in length among strains (not shown) and represent either vestiges of nemis-positive intervals or never experienced the insertion of nemis. In either instance, it is intriguing that, while genes analyzed occupy the same position in N. meningitidis and N. lactamica and hence were detected by PCR, the corresponding intergenic regions evolved differently in the two species.
Taking into account that DNA exchanges between pathogenic and apathogenic Neisseria species are plausibly as frequent as those occurring between meningococci (7), the asymmetry in the partition of nemis-positive and nemis-negative intergenic regions between N. meningitidis and N. lactamica strains is striking. This permits the hypothesis that the persistence of nemis DNA at specific chromosomal sites may be functional to meningococci.
Many N. meningitidis genes listed in Fig. 2 have a functional role. Some encode either transcriptional regulators (ORFs 380, 1585, 1650, and 1711) or regulatory proteins (ORFs 193, 1953, and 2066); others encode proteins known to be involved in pathogenesis (ORFs 329, 700, and 886) or shown to be essential for the development of bacteremia in the rat (ORFs 1422, 1558, and 1671) (12). Transcripts spanning the underlined ORFs are processed at nemis RNA hairpins (5, 9). The same holds for mRNAs spanning the additional ORFs listed in Fig. 2 (unpublished results). The hypothesis that nemis-mediated RNA processing may have relevance in the life of meningococci as pathogens is strengthened by the observation that RNase III, while dispensable for viability, is crucial for the survival of meningococci in the infected host (11).

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank Caterina Pagliarulo for providing us with neisserial
strains and Giustina Silvestro for help in biocomputing analyses.
This work was partly supported by a grant of program PRIN 2002 of MIUR to P.P.D.N.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Dipartimento di Biologia e Patologia Cellulare e Molecolare, "L. Califano," Universita degli Studi Napoli Federico II, Via S. Pansini 5, 80131 Naples, Italy. Phone: 0039-081-7462059. Fax: 0039-081-7703285. E-mail:
dinocera{at}unina.it.

Editor: J. N. Weiser

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Infection and Immunity, July 2003, p. 4217-4221, Vol. 71, No. 7
0019-9567/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.71.7.4217-4221.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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