Abstract
We report the 4.97-Mb draft genome sequence of a highly efficient arsenate-resistant bacterium, Ochrobactrum sp. strain CDB2. It contains a novel arsenic resistance (ars) operon (arsR-arsC1-ACR3-arsC2-arsH-mfs) and two non-operon-associated ars genes, arsC3 and arsB. The genome information will aid in the understanding of the arsenic resistance mechanism of this and other bacterial species.
GENOME ANNOUNCEMENT
An Ochrobactrum strain (CDB2) isolated from arsenic-contaminated cattle tick dip sites in northeastern New South Wales, Australia, exhibited high resistance to arsenical compounds, especially arsenate (1). Obtaining the full genome sequence of this organism would help us to understand the mechanism of arsenic resistance of this bacterium and related species.
A pair-end library was constructed and pyrosequencing was performed using a Roche GS FLX+ sequencer at the John Curtin School of Medical Research, the Australian National University, Canberra. After assembling the raw data by using the GS de novo Assembler (Roche, version 2.6.3), we used the RAST (Rapid Annotations using Subsystems Technology) server (2) for draft genome annotation, subsystem classification, and G+C content calculation. The putative ars genes were further analyzed with BLASTp and HHpred (http://toolkit.tuebingen.mpg.de/hhpred). The NCBI Prokaryotic Genomes Automatic Annotation Pipeline (PGAAP) (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/genomes/static/Pipeline.html) was used to produce GenBank format data.
The draft genome of Ochrobactrum sp. strain CDB2 comprises 4,971,228 bases assembled from a 20-fold coverage of raw data and has a G+C content of 53.6%. It contained 147 contigs, with the longest consisting of 350,235 bases while the median length of all contigs was 25,233 bases. We found 4,868 coding sequences (CDSs) and 54 tRNA/rRNA genes in the constructed genome.
Our previous identification at the genus level was based on an analysis of a partial 16S rRNA gene sequence (1,341 bases) and a fatty acid composition profile (1). With the full 16S sequence obtained, a new search showed a 100% match with a 1,387-bp 16S sequence from Ochrobactrum pseudogrignonense strain CCUG 30717T (accession no. AM422371) (3). The nucleotide sequences of three other genes, groEL, gyrB, and recA (accession no. FM863822, FM863816, and AM422877, respectively), also matched perfectly, except for one base in groEL, between CDB2 and Ochrobactrum pseudogrignone CCUG 30717T. These identified CDB2 as a strain of Ochrobactrum pseudogrignonense.
Analysis revealed a novel ars operon (arsR-arsC1-ACR3-arsC2-arsH-mfs). Interestingly, two arsenate reductase genes coexist in it: the deduced protein ArsC1 was highly homologous to the ArsC of Saccharomyces cerevisiae (4), while ArsC2 more closely matched the Escherichia coli reductase (5). The last gene (mfs) is predicted to specify a protein belonging to the superfamily of major facilitator transporters while sharing only limited homology to known ArsB and ACR3 proteins. The function of this transmembrane transporter warrants investigation. We noticed that such an operon also exists in the Ochrobactrum anthropi strain ATCC 49188 genome (accession no. NC_009668.1, locus 521,109 to 525,495). A similar operon (lacking mfs) has been identified in Ochrobactrum tritici strain SCII24T (6).
Two other putative ars genes, arsC3 (which, like arsC2, also codes for a glutaredoxin-dependent arsenate reductase) and arsB, were also found in the genome. However, rather than being located in ars operons, each of them presents independently of other correlated ars genes. The existence of genes for three arsenate reductases and three transporters in the same genome may explain the remarkably high resistance of this bacterium to arsenate (1).
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers.
The draft annotated genome sequence has been deposited at DDBJ/EMBL/GenBank under the accession number AKVI00000000. The version described in this paper is the first version, AKVI01000000.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Jonathan Chandran and Wei Zheng are thanked for DNA isolation and purification.
This project was supported by an internal grant from the University of Wollongong.
Footnotes
Citation Yang Y, Yu X, Zhang R. 2013. Draft genome sequence of Ochrobactrum pseudogrignonense strain CDB2, a highly efficient arsenate-resistant soil bacterium from arsenic-contaminated cattle dip sites. Genome Announc. 1(2):e00173-13. doi:10.1128/genomeA.00173-13.
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