An nptI-sacB-sacR cartridge for constructing directed, unmarked mutations in gram-negative bacteria by marker exchange-eviction mutagenesis |
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Authors: | J L Ried A Collmer |
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Affiliation: | Department of Botany, University of Maryland, College Park 20742. |
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Abstract: | A technique for marker exchange-eviction mutagenesis that enables the construction of directed, unmarked mutations in Gram-negative bacteria was demonstrated in Erwinia chrysanthemi. The technique employs an nptI-sacB-sacR cartridge that is carried on a 3.8-kb BamHI fragment and confers kanamycin (Km) resistance and sucrose sensitivity (due to the production of levansucrase by sacB) in E. chrysanthemi. The cartridge was inserted into a Sau3A site in a cloned E. chrysanthemi pelC gene (encoding pectate lyase isozyme PLc) and then introduced into the Erwinia genome by gene exchange recombination. The resulting mutant was KmR, sucrose-sensitive, and PLc-deficient. The cartridge was then excised from the plasmid-borne pelC gene by PstI cleavage to leave a 28-bp frame-shifting insertion. The pelC allele containing the 28-bp insertion was exchanged for the chromosomal allele containing the nptI-sacB-sacR cartridge by selection for sucrose tolerance. The resulting E. chrysanthemi mutant was Kms and PLc-deficient. The technique permits the construction of complex strains with many directed mutations without the introduction of a corresponding number of antibiotic resistance markers and should prove useful, for example, in exploring the role of the multiple pel genes in E. chrysanthemi. |
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