Genetic recombination of bacterial plasmid DNA. Physical and genetic analysis of the products of plasmid recombination in Escherichia coli
- PMID: 6308264
- DOI: 10.1016/s0022-2836(83)80097-7
Genetic recombination of bacterial plasmid DNA. Physical and genetic analysis of the products of plasmid recombination in Escherichia coli
Abstract
Derivatives of plasmid pBR322 DNA containing tet mutations were constructed by inserting XhoI linkers at various sites in the tetracycline resistance gene. Monomer plasmids containing either the tet-10 allele located at nucleotide position 23 or the tet-14 allele located at nucleotide position 1267 were used to construct a circular dimer containing one copy of each allele and a circular trimer containing one copy of the tet-10 allele and two copies of the tet-14 allele. Genetic recombination of these plasmid DNAs to produce a functional tetracycline resistance gene could be detected as the production of tetracycline-resistant progeny during the growth of transformants or using a restriction mapping assay which detected the rearrangement of the mutant alleles. The structure of individual tetracycline-resistant recombination products was determined by restriction mapping. This analysis suggested that as many as 70% of the plasmid recombination events in Escherichia coli AB1157 could have involved gene conversion events. The formation of these recombination products was most easily predicted by a model involving figure 8 recombination intermediates and the formation of symmetric regions of heteroduplex. Recombination in JC10287 delta(srlR-recA)304 occurred at 5% of the wild-type frequency and appeared to occur by a similar mechanism. Recombination in JC9604 recA56 recB21 recC22 sbcA23 occurred at 20 times the wild-type frequency and appeared to involve multiple independent recombination events.
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