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. 1985 Jan;47(1):5-10.
doi: 10.1128/iai.47.1.5-10.1985.

Construction of a conjugative plasmid with potential use in vaccines against heat-labile enterotoxin

Construction of a conjugative plasmid with potential use in vaccines against heat-labile enterotoxin

T M Chen et al. Infect Immun. 1985 Jan.

Abstract

A conjugative plasmid with potential usefulness for vaccine strains was constructed. In the first step, a 5.9-kilobase DNA segment containing the two loci for the A and B subunits of heat-labile enterotoxin with a mutation in the gene for the A subunit was joined to the cloning vehicle pGA22, generating the nonconjugative plasmid pPMC4 with genes for resistance to tetracycline and chloramphenicol. In the second step, a segment of pPMC4 containing the genes for the A and B subunits, the gene for chloramphenicol resistance, and the replication genes of pGA22 was ligated to the genes for conjugal transfer of the F plasmid, generating the 54.9-kb plasmid pPMC5. Eleven porcine Escherichia coli isolates were tested as recipients for pPMC4 and pPMC5. For pPMC4, transformation and mobilization with a conjugative R plasmid were used to effect plasmid transfer. Only 1 of the 11 strains acted as a recipient in transformation. Mobilization with the R plasmid occurred with two strains, but the plasmids were altered during transfer. In contrast, pPMC5 was transferred with high frequency and unaltered to 9 of the 11 E. coli strains. Transconjugants from these nine matings produced high titers of the B subunit and no active heat-labile enterotoxin. Plasmid pPMC5 was stable in three porcine E. coli strains tested; plasmid pPMC4 was somewhat less stable in these strains. The method we describe for the construction of conjugative chimeric plasmids offers an opportunity for introducing genes with potential for immunization into bacterial strains that are suitable for colonizing the appropriate host sites.

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