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. 1982 Sep;151(3):1380-90.
doi: 10.1128/jb.151.3.1380-1390.1982.

2-micrometers DNA-like plasmids in the osmophilic haploid yeast Saccharomyces rouxii

2-micrometers DNA-like plasmids in the osmophilic haploid yeast Saccharomyces rouxii

A Toh-e et al. J Bacteriol. 1982 Sep.

Abstract

DNA plasmids were detected in two independent strains of Saccharomyces rouxii among 100 yeast strains other than Saccharomyces cerevisiae tested. The plasmids, pSR1 and pSR2, had almost the same mass (approximately 4 X 10(6) daltons) as 2-micrometers DNA of S. cerevisiae. pSR1 and pSR2 gave identical restriction maps with restriction endonucleases BamHI, EcoRI, HincII, HindIII, and XhoI, and both lacked restriction sites for PstI, SalI, and SmaI. These maps, however, differed significantly from that of S. cerevisiae 2-micrometers DNA. Restriction analysis also revealed two isomeric forms of each plasmid and suggested the presence of a pair of inverted repeat sequences in the molecules where intramolecular recombination took place. DNA-DNA hybridization between the pSR1 and pSR2 DNAs indicated significant homology between their base sequences, whereas no homology was detected between pSR1 and pJDB219, a chimeric plasmid constructed from a whole molecule of 2-micrometers DNA, plasmid pMB9, and a 1.2-kilobase DNA fragment of S. cerevisiae bearing the LEU2 gene. A chimeric plasmid constructed with pSR1 and YIp1, the larger EcoRI-SalI fragment of pBR322 ligated with a 6.1-kilobase DNA fragment of S. cerevisiae bearing the HIS3 gene, could replicate autonomously in an S. cerevisiae host and produced isomers, presumably by intramolecular recombination at the inverted repeats.

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