Highly mobile DNA segment of IncI alpha plasmid R64: a clustered inversion region
Open Access
- 31 December 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Journal of Bacteriology
- Vol. 165 (1) , 94-100
- https://doi.org/10.1128/jb.165.1.94-100.1986
Abstract
When R64 DNA was digested with EcoRI, two DNA fragments not equimolar to the plasmid DNA were produced. A DNA region including these fragments was cloned (pKK009), and the pKK009 DNA sample was found to be a mixture of six or more DNA species with EcoRI, PstI, and AvaI cleavage sites at different positions, suggesting a complex rearrangement of DNA. When a part of the pKK009 DNA was removed by HindIII digestion, 33 different types of plasmids (pKK010-series plasmids) were obtained out of 58 clones tested, but no DNA rearrangement could be observed. On the basis of a comparison of the detailed restriction maps of these pKK010-series plasmids, we propose a model in which four DNA segments invert independently or in groups within the 1.95-kilobase region of R64, so that the arrangements of these four segments change randomly. The fixed pKK010-series plasmid DNA was again rearranged in the presence of R64, indicating that trans-acting gene function may be present to mediate the DNA rearrangement. The gene (tentatively designated as rci) was located on a 4.5-kilobase E9' fragment of R64.This publication has 32 references indexed in Scilit:
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