A single amino acid alteration in the initiation protein is responsible for the DNA overproduction phenotype of copy number mutants of plasmid R6K. |
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Authors: | M Inuzuka and Y Wada |
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Abstract: | A novel type of high copy-number (cop) mutants of a mini-R6K plasmid were isolated. The mutations were mapped in the pir gene which encodes the pi initiation protein for plasmid R6K DNA replication. They resulted in an alteration by substitution of a single amino acid: threonine to isoleucine at the 108th position for the cop41, and proline to serine at the 113th position for the cop50, of the 305 amino acid pi protein. The cop41 mutation in the pi protein was found to be trans-dominant over the wild-type allele in the copy control of plasmid R6K. Moreover, it was shown that the altered pi protein was not overproduced in maxicells carrying this mutant plasmid and had a higher affinity to the repeated sequence which is present in the pir promoter region. Most likely the mutated pi protein also interacts more efficiently with the same repeated sequences, a target of pi, in the replication origin region and increases the frequency of the initiation event per cell division. |
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