PixR, a novel activator of conjugative transfer of IncX4 resistance plasmids, mitigates the fitness cost of mcr-1 carriage in Escherichia coli

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Abstract

ABSTRACT The emergence of the plasmid-borne colistin resistance gene mcr-1 threats public health. IncX4-type plasmids are one of the most epidemiologically successful vehicles for spreading mcr-1 worldwide. Since MCR-1 is known for imposing a fitness cost to its host bacterium, the successful spread of mcr-1 -bearing plasmids might be linked to high conjugation frequency, which would enhance the maintenance of the plasmid in the host without antibiotic selection. However, the mechanism of IncX4 plasmids conjugation remains unclear. In this study, we used high-density transposon mutagenesis to identify factors required for IncX4 plasmid transfer and 18 genes were identified, including five with annotations unrelated to conjugation. The Cappable-seq and RNA-seq analysis confirmed that a novel transcriptional regulator gene, pixR , directly regulates the transfer of IncX4 plasmids by binding the promoter of 13 essential transfer genes to increase their transcription. Plasmid invasion and co-culture competition assays revealed that pixR is essential for the spread and persistence of mcr-1 -bearing IncX4 plasmids in bacterial populations, and effective conjugation is crucial for alleviating the fitness cost exerted by mcr-1 carriage. The existence of the IncX4-specific pixR gene increases plasmid transmissibility while promoting the invasion and persistence of mcr-1 -bearing plasmids in bacterial populations, which helps explain their global prevalence. IMPORTANCE The spread of clinical important antibiotic resistance genes is frequently related to some epidemic plasmids. However, the underlying molecular mechanisms contributing to the successful spread of these epidemic plasmids remains unclear. The significant of our research indicated that efficient conjugation could promote the invasion and persistence of plasmids within a bacterial population, resulting in the successful dissemination of epidemic plasmids in nature. Our data also highlight the importance of developing plasmid conjugation inhibitors to solve the antibiotic resistance crisis.

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last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00