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1.
The streptococcal plasmid pMV158 replicates by the rolling-circle mechanism. One feature of this replication mechanism is the generation of single-stranded DNA intermediates which are converted to double-stranded molecules. Lagging-strand synthesis initiates from the plasmid single-stranded origin, sso. We have used the pMV158-derivative plasmid pLS1 (containing the ssoA type of lagging-strand origin) and a set of pLS1 derivatives with mutations in two conserved regions of the ssoA (the recombination site B [RSB] and a conserved 6-nucleotide sequence [CS-6]) to identify sequences important for plasmid lagging-strand replication in Streptococcus pneumoniae. Cells containing plasmids with mutations in the RSB accumulated 30-fold more single-stranded DNA than cells containing plasmids with mutations in the CS-6 sequence. Specificity of lagging-strand synthesis was tested by the development of a new in vitro replication system with pneumococcal cell extracts. Four major initiation sites of lagging-strand DNA synthesis were observed. The specificity of initiation was maintained in plasmids with mutations in the CS-6 region. Mutations in the RSB region, on the other hand, resulted in the loss of specific initiation of lagging-strand synthesis and also severely reduced the efficiency of replication.  相似文献   

2.
pMV158, a non-self-transmissible plasmid encoding tetracycline resistance, was conjugally transferred from Enterococcus faecalis JH203 to Lactococcus lactis subsp. lactis IL1403. This transfer appeared to be dependent on the cotransfer of the conjugative plasmids pAM beta 1 or pIP501. Intraspecies conjugal transfer of pMV158 also occurred in strain IL1403. In contrast to the transfer from E. faecalis, transfer in IL1403 did not require the presence of a conjugative plasmid in the donor strain but, rather, appeared to be dependent on putative chromosomal functions in strain IL1403. The transfer of pMV158 from strain IL1403 required the presence of an active pMV158-encoded protein, which showed homology to the Pre (plasmid recombination enzyme) proteins encoded by several small plasmids extracted from Staphylococcus aureus, such as pT181.  相似文献   

3.
An unresolved question in herpesvirus biology is why some herpesviruses contain more than one lytic origin of replication (oriLyt). Using murine gammaherpesvirus 68 (MHV-68) as model virus containing two oriLyts, we demonstrate that loss of either of the two oriLyts was well tolerated in some situations but not in others both in vitro and in vivo. This was related to the cell type, the organ or the route of inoculation. Depending on the cell type, different cellular proteins, for example Hexim1 and Rbbp4, were found to be associated with oriLyt DNA. Overexpression or downregulation of these proteins differentially affected the growth of mutants lacking either the left or the right oriLyt. Thus, multiple oriLyts are required to ensure optimal fitness in different cell types and tissues.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Twenty-two Streptococcus thermophilus strains used for milk fermentations were analyzed for their plasmid content and 13 of them (59%) were found to contain one or two plasmids. Fifteen S. thermophilus plasmids were divided into four groups using DNA homology. Ten plasmids were classified within group A and they shared homologies with all the previously sequenced S. thermophilus plasmids. Three plasmids (group B) hybridized with each other and two plasmids only hybridized with themselves (groups C and D). Single-stranded DNA was detected within strains containing plasmids of groups A, C, and D, indicating that they replicate via a rolling-circle mode. The only plasmid of group C, named pSMQ172, was further characterized. This 4230-bp plasmid replicates in Escherichia coli, Lactococcus lactis, and Streptococcus salivarius and does not confer phage resistance. Comparisons with databases showed that pSMQ172 was related to pMV158 of Streptococcus agalactiae and to pSSU1 of Streptococcus suis. These results suggest that genetic exchanges may have occurred between pathogenic and nonpathogenic streptococci.  相似文献   

6.
Promiscuous, rolling-circle replication plasmid pMV158 determines tetracycline resistance to its host and can be mobilized by conjugation. Plasmid pLS1 is a deletion derivative of pMV158 that has lost its conjugative mobilization ability. Both plasmids replicate efficiently and are stably inherited in Streptococcus pneumoniae. We have analyzed the effect of pMV158 and pLS1 carriage on the bacterial growth rate. Whereas the parental plasmid does not significantly modify the cell doubling time, pLS1 slows down the growth of the bacterial host by 8-9%. The bases of the differential burden caused by pMV158 and pLS1 carriage are not yet understood. The negligible cost of the pMV158 parental natural plasmid on the host might explain the prevalence of small, multicopy, rolling-circle replication plasmids, even though they lack any selectable trait.  相似文献   

7.
Conjugal transfer of the small plasmid pUB110 betweenBacillus subtilis strains was studied under conditions of microcosms with sterile and nonsterile soil. Plasmid transfer proved to be possible after soil inoculation with vegetative partner cells or with their spores. Plasmid transfer occurred at temperatures of 30 and 22–23°C.  相似文献   

8.
Shuttle vector pAT18 was transferred by conjugation fromEscherichia coliS17-1 toEnterococcus faecalisOG1RF andEnterococcus faeciumSE34. Transfer was mediated by the transfer functions of plasmid RK2 inE. coliS17-1 and the origin of conjugal transfer (oriT) located on pAT18. TheoriTsequence was then inserted into two plasmids to generate vectors pTEX5235 and pTEX5236. These two vectors cannot replicate in gram-positive bacteria and can be used to make insertion mutants in gram-positive bacteria. An internal sequence from an autolysin gene ofE. faecalisOG1RF was cloned into pTEX5235 and transferred by conjugation fromE. coliS17-1 toE. faecalisOG1RF. The plasmid was found to integrate into the chromosome of OG1RF by a single crossover event, resulting in a disrupted autolysin gene. A cosmid carrying the pyrimidine gene cluster fromE. faecalis,with a transposon insertion inpyrC,was also transferred fromE. coliS17-1 toE. faecalisOG1RF. After selection for the transposon, it was found to have recombined into the recipient chromosome by a double crossover between the cosmid and the chromosome of OG1RF. This resulted in apyrCknockout mutant showing an auxotrophic phenotype.  相似文献   

9.
Rhodococcus equi is a facultative intracellular, Gram-positive, soilborne actinomycete which can cause severe pyogranulomatous pneumonia with abscessation in young horses (foals) and in immunocompromised people, such as persons with AIDS. All strains of R. equi isolated from foals and approximately a third isolated from humans contain a large, ∼81-kb plasmid which is essential for the intramacrophage growth of the organism and for virulence in foals and murine in vivo model systems. We found that the entire virulence plasmid could be transferred from plasmid-containing strains of R. equi (donor) to plasmid-free R. equi strains (recipient) at a high frequency and that plasmid transmission reestablished the capacity for intracellular growth in macrophages. Plasmid transfer required living cells and cell-to-cell contact and was unaffected by the presence of DNase, factors pointing to conjugation as the major means of genetic transfer. Deletion of a putative relaxase-encoding gene, traA, located in the proposed conjugative region of the plasmid, abolished plasmid transfer. Reversion of the traA mutation restored plasmid transmissibility. Finally, plasmid transmission to other Rhodococcus species and some additional related organisms was demonstrated. This is the first study showing a virulence plasmid transfer in R. equi, and it establishes a mechanism by which the virulence plasmid can move among bacteria in the soil.  相似文献   

10.
Nieto C  Espinosa M 《Plasmid》2003,49(3):281-285
Plasmid pMV158 has been employed to construct cloning non-mobilizable vectors for various Gram-positive organisms. Here we report the construction of a mobilizable pMV158-based plasmid that harbors the gene encoding the green fluorescent protein under the control of a promoter inducible by maltose. The plasmid was mobilized between strains of Streptococcus pneumoniae as well as from S. pneumoniae to Lactococcus lactis or Enterococcus faecalis at the same frequency as its parental. Transconjugant that received the GFP-tagged plasmid could be detected by their fluorescence, which was especially high in E. faecalis cells.  相似文献   

11.
The nonconjugative streptococcal plasmid pMV158 can be mobilized by the conjugative streptococcal plasmid pIP501. We determined the sequence of the 1.1-kilobase EcoRI fragment of pMV158 to complete the DNA sequence of the plasmid. We showed that an open reading frame, mob (able to encode a polypeptide of 58,020 daltons), is required for mobilization of pMV158. An intergenic region present in the EcoRI fragment contains four lengthy palindromes that are found also in one or more of the staphylococcal plasmids pT181, pE194, and pUB110. One palindromic sequence, palD, which is common to all four plasmids, also appeared to be necessary for mobilization. Circumstantial evidence indicates that this sequence contains both an oriT site and the mob promoter. The Mob protein is homologous in its amino-terminal half to Pre proteins encoded by pT181 and pE194 that were shown by others to be essential for site-specific cointegrative plasmid recombination; their main biological function may be plasmid mobilization.  相似文献   

12.
13.
We have examined nutritional factors influencing conjugal transfer of the two nonsymbiotic large plasmids, pRmeGR4a and pRmeGR4b, of Rhizobium meliloti GR4. To monitor transfer, each plasmid was tagged with a different antibiotic resistance marker. Transfer of plasmid pRmeGR4b was dependent upon the presence of plasmid pRmeGR4a on the same donor cell. Transconjugants for pRmeGR4b were obtained at frequencies 5-to 10-fold higher than transconjugants carrying both plasmids, indicating that mobilization of pRmeGR4b by pRmeGR4a probably occurred in trans. Conjugal transfer of the tagged plasmids between R. meliloti strains was tested on minimal medium supplemented with single amino acids, nitrate, or ammonium as the single nitrogen source. A higher number of transconjugants was obtained when glutamate was the only nitrogen source, whereas conjugation was virtually undetectable on ammonium. No relationship was found between donor or recipient growth rate and plasmid transfer rate on a given nitrogen source. Furthermore, in media containing both glutamate and ammonium as nitrogen sources, transfer was reduced almost 100-fold compared with that in media containing glutamate alone. Inhibition was readily detected at 2.5 mM or higher concentrations of either ammonium chloride or ammonium sulfate and appeared to be specific for exogenously supplied ammonium. Inhibition of conjugal transfer between R. meliloti strains by ammonium was only observed for rhizobial plasmids, not for a heterologous plasmid such as RP4. Apparently, ammonium did not affect the plasmid-encoded transfer machinery, as it had no influence on rhizobial plasmid transfer from R. meliloti to Agrobacterium tumefaciens. The effect of ammonium seemed to take place on R. meliloti recipient cells, thereby reducing the efficiency of plasmid conjugation, probably by affecting mating pair formation or stabilization.  相似文献   

14.
Ebola virus (EBOV), family Filoviridae, emerged in 1976 on the African continent. Since then it caused several outbreaks of viral hemorrhagic fever in humans with case fatality rates up to 90% and remains a serious Public Health concern and biothreat pathogen. The most pathogenic and best-studied species is Zaire ebolavirus (ZEBOV). EBOV encodes one viral surface glycoprotein (GP), which is essential for replication, a determinant of pathogenicity and an important immunogen. GP mediates viral entry through interaction with cellular surface molecules, which results in the uptake of virus particles via macropinocytosis. Later in this pathway endosomal acidification activates the cysteine proteases Cathepsin B and L (CatB, CatL), which have been shown to cleave ZEBOV-GP leading to subsequent exposure of the putative receptor-binding and fusion domain and productive infection. We studied the effect of CatB and CatL on in vitro and in vivo replication of EBOV. Similar to previous findings, our results show an effect of CatB, but not CatL, on ZEBOV entry into cultured cells. Interestingly, cell entry by other EBOV species (Bundibugyo, Côte d''Ivoire, Reston and Sudan ebolavirus) was independent of CatB or CatL as was EBOV replication in general. To investigate whether CatB and CatL have a role in vivo during infection, we utilized the mouse model for ZEBOV. Wild-type (control), catB−/− and catL−/− mice were equally susceptible to lethal challenge with mouse-adapted ZEBOV with no difference in virus replication and time to death. In conclusion, our results show that CatB and CatL activity is not required for EBOV replication. Furthermore, EBOV glycoprotein cleavage seems to be mediated by an array of proteases making targeted therapeutic approaches difficult.  相似文献   

15.
A. V. Smith  J. A. King    T. L. Orr-Weaver 《Genetics》1993,135(3):817-829
A collection of Drosophila deficiency stocks was examined by bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) labeling of embryos to analyze the DNA replication patterns in late embryogenesis. This permitted us to screen 34% of the genome for genes that when absent in homozygous deficiencies affect the cell cycle or DNA replication. We found three genomic intervals that when deleted result in cessation of DNA replication in the embryo, 39D2-3;E2-F1, 51E and 75C5-7;F1. Embryos deleted for the 75C5-7;F1 region stop DNA replication at the time in embryogenesis when a G(1) phase is added to the mitotic cell cycle and the larval tissues begin to become polytene. Thus, this interval may contain a gene controlling these cell cycle transitions. DNA replication arrests earlier in embryos homozygous for deletions for the other two regions. Analysis of the effects of deletions in the 39D2-3;E2-F1 region on DNA replication showed that the block to DNA replication correlates with deletion of the histone genes. We were able to identify a single, lethal complementation group in 51E, l(2)51Ec, that is responsible for the cessation of replication observed in this interval. Deficiencies that removed one of the Drosophila cdc2 genes and the cyclin A gene had no effect on replication during embryogenesis. Additionally, our analysis identified a gene, pimples, that is required for the proper completion of mitosis in the post-blastoderm divisions of the embryo.  相似文献   

16.
The broad-host-range plasmid pAMbeta1, which codes for erythromycin and lincomycin resistance, was transferred by conjugation into Lactobacillus acidophilus, Lactobacillus reuteri, and Lactobacillus salivarius. A novel 17-megadalton plasmid molecule was detected in the transconjugants, confirming the introduction of pAMbeta1 into each species.  相似文献   

17.
The Infidelity of Conjugal DNA Transfer in ESCHERICHIA COLI   总被引:5,自引:1,他引:4  
The accuracy of replication and transfer of a lacI gene on an F' plasmid was measured. Following conjugal transfer of the F', a small but reproducible increase (1.8-fold) in the frequency of lacI- mutations was detected. Among these, however, the frequency of nonsense mutations was 15-fold higher than in the absence of transfer. This corresponds to a 300-fold increase in the rate of base substitutions per round of replication compared with normal vegetative DNA replication. The amber mutational spectra revealed that, following conjugal transfer, mutation frequencies were increased markedly at all sites detected. In addition, an increase in G:C leads to A:T transitions was noted and was due almost entirely to an enhanced proportion of mutants recovered at the spontaneous hotspots (amber sites 6, 15 and 34). recA-dependent processes were not responsible for the increase in mutation, since similar results were observed with various recA- donor and recipient combinations. These results demonstrate that the fidelity of conjugal DNA replication is considerably lower than that of vegetative DNA replication.  相似文献   

18.
Escherichia coli transforms the methanogenic archaeon Methanococcus maripaludis at frequencies ranging from 0.2 × 10−6 to 2 × 10−6 per recipient cell. Transformation requires cell-to-cell contact, oriT, and tra functions, is insensitive to DNase I, and otherwise displays hallmarks of conjugation.Conjugal transfer of DNA involves a specific set of transfer (tra) functions that mediate the mobilization of DNA containing an origin of transfer (oriT) from a donor to a recipient in a process requiring cell-to-cell contact (9). While conjugation is often very efficient between members of a given species or genus, it can also occur at a lower efficiency between phylogenetically distant microorganisms with structurally distinct cell surfaces. Escherichia coli, for example, mediates conjugal transfer of DNA to such diverse bacterial recipients as cyanobacteria (23), spirochetes (14), and a variety of Gram-positive bacteria (17, 22); E. coli even mediates conjugal DNA transfer to members of the domain Eukarya, such as to Saccharomyces cerevisiae (6) and mammalian (20) cells. Because of its broad range of potential recipients, conjugation has proven to be a valuable genetic tool (11) and may be an important mechanism of horizontal gene transfer and a driver of genome evolution (7). Conjugation-like DNA transfer has also been demonstrated in members of the domain Archaea (5, 15). However, conjugation between Bacteria and Archaea has not been demonstrated, despite the observation that many whole-genome sequences of Archaea harbor DNA that appears to be of bacterial origin (7).To investigate whether conjugation can occur between Bacteria and Archaea, the RP4 (IncPα group) conjugal-transfer system was used to attempt to mobilize DNA from E. coli to the anaerobic, methanogenic archaeon Methanococcus maripaludis strain S2 (21). The RP4 system was selected because previous work demonstrated that this plasmid supports the transfer of DNA from E. coli to phylogenetically distant recipients, including yeast (3) and mammalian (20) cells. Additionally, E. coli has been shown to successfully conjugate with strictly anaerobic bacterial strains (22). M. maripaludis was chosen as a recipient because it has growth parameters similar to those of E. coli and has readily available selectable markers (1). For all the experiments described, M. maripaludis was grown in liquid or solid (excluding cysteine) McCas medium (12), supplemented with 2.5 μg/ml puromycin (Pur) where appropriate, using standard anaerobic techniques (2). All plating for conjugation experiments, except for determination of viable-E. coli cell counts, was performed in an anaerobic chamber (Coy, Grass Lake, MI) with an atmosphere of 5:5:90 H2-CO2-N2. E. coli was grown in Difco LB medium (Becton-Dickinson, Sparks, MD) supplemented where appropriate with 50 μg/ml kanamycin sulfate (Kan) and ampicillin (Amp).To interrogate conjugal DNA transfer between E. coli and M. maripaludis, a set of vectors that either contained or lacked cis-acting sites required for mobilization by RP4 transfer functions were constructed (Table (Table1).1). Each of these vectors contained a Pur resistance (Purr) gene cassette (pac) (4) flanked by ∼0.5 kb DNA homologous to regions 5′ and 3′ of the M. maripaludis nrpR gene (nrpR::pac), which allows for selection by Pur in M. maripaludis and provides sites for homologous recombination into the nrpR locus of the M. maripaludis chromosome. This construct was selected because it has previously been used to transform M. maripaludis to Pur resistance by recombination into the nrpR locus using a polyethylene glycol (PEG)-mediated transformation protocol (10, 18). After it was demonstrated that plasmids of the appropriate genotypes support conjugation from donor strain E. coli S17-1, which contains the RP4 trans-acting transfer (tra) functions on the chromosome via an integrated RP4-2-Tc::Mu-Km::Tn7 cassette (16), to E. coli recipient cells (Table (Table1;1; see also the supplemental material), we investigated whether these same donor strains could support DNA transfer to M. maripaludis.

TABLE 1.

Transformation of M. maripaludis by E. coli
PlasmidfLocus(i) from mobilizable plasmidaPredicted mobilization phenotypeMediates conjugation to E. coli recipient?bNo. of Purr colonies per 108M. maripaludis cellsc
pTAP1mob-oriT-repMob+Yes24
pTAP2repMobNo<1d
pTAP3oriT-repMobNo<1d
pTAP4mob-oriTMob+Yes51
pTAP5NoneMobNo0e
pTAP6oriT regionMob+Yes175
Open in a separate windowaFrom pBBR1MCS-2 (8) for pTAP1 to -4 or RP4 (13) for pTAP6 (see the supplemental material).bIndicates whether recipient growth was observed (yes) or not (no) under appropriate selection conditions for transconjugants (see the supplemental material).cAverage of results from 3 experiments.dOnly one colony was observed in three experiments.eNo colonies observed.fAll vectors were based on pCR2.1 (Ampr Kanr) and contained nrpR::pac.For initial conjugation experiments, 20-ml cultures of E. coli donor cells were pelleted by centrifugation, resuspended in 5 ml of the recipient culture, and transferred to 28-ml serum tubes under anaerobic conditions (see the supplemental material). Sealed tubes were removed from the chamber, centrifuged for 10 min at 750 × g, and returned to the anaerobic chamber, and cell pellets were resuspended in 1 ml of McCas medium without sulfide. Aliquots (10 to 50 μl) of the concentrated donor-recipient mixture were spread on Pur-containing McCas medium plates, and dilutions were plated on nonselective LB and McCas medium plates to determine total counts of viable cells of the donor and recipient, respectively. Preliminary experiments indicated that, although E. coli remained fully viable during at least the first 4 h of coincubation with M. maripaludis on McCas medium plates (data not shown), significant growth was not observed; thus, no selection against the donor strain was necessary. Plates were incubated at 37°C for 1 day (LB medium) or 4 days (McCas medium), and colonies were counted. In a series of three experiments, only two Pur-resistant M. maripaludis colonies were observed when the mob-negative vectors pTAP2, -3, and -5 were used (Table (Table1).1). When these were restreaked onto selective McCas medium plates, either no or very poor growth occurred, suggesting that these were not true transformants. In contrast, many M. maripaludis colonies were observed when vectors that were capable of being mobilized to an E. coli recipient were used (pTAP1, -4, and -6) (Table (Table1).1). For these vectors, frequencies of transformation ranged from 0.2 × 10−6 to 2 × 10−6 per recipient cell, suggesting that the Pur-resistant colonies arose due to conjugation. These are similar to frequencies of RP4-mediated conjugation from E. coli to diverse recipients, such as yeast (6) and Clostridium spp. (22).To confirm that the Pur-resistant colonies obtained in these experiments were indeed transformed with the nrpR::pac-containing vector, randomly selected colonies (5 each from matings using pTAP1 and pTAP4 or 19 from pTAP6) were screened by PCR and Southern hybridization (see the supplemental material). PCR using primers complementary to the 3′ or 5′ end of the pac cassette and to the M. maripaludis genome 3′ or 5′ of nrpR (outside the regions of homology in nrpR::pac) as well as Southern blots using a region of the pac gene as a probe indicated that all tested strains contained nrpR::pac recombined at the nrpR locus (Fig. (Fig.1).1). Approximately half of the strains were the result of double-crossover events, i.e., replacement of genomic nrpR with nrpR::pac.Open in a separate windowFIG. 1.Genetic analysis of M. maripaludis transformants. (A) A schematic diagram of the nrpR gene and flanking region in the M. maripaludis genome and the nrpR::pac region of the gene replacement constructs pTAP1, pTAP4, and pTAP6, harboring mob-oriT-rep, mob-oriT, and RP4-oriT, respectively (open boxes). Primers for PCR analyses are shown with arrowheads, and the probe for Southern analysis is indicated. gDNA, genomic DNA. (B) Southern blot and PCR analyses of DNA extracted from putative pTAP1, pTAP4, and pTAP6 transformants of M. maripaludis. Arrows indicate the signature band (6.3 kb) for double crossover (c/o), 5′ crossover, and 3′ crossover. Positive and negative PCR amplifications are shown as “+” and “−,” respectively. WT, wild-type M. maripaludis S2; MM500, nrpR deletion mutant generated by PEG-mediated transformation with an nrpR::pac-containing construct (10).Using the pTAP6 vector (GenBank accession no. HM536627), a series of controls were performed to determine whether transformation was a result of conjugation. Matings were performed as described above, except that donor and recipient cells were pelleted and resuspended separately, coming into contact only when plated on McCas medium plus Pur agar. This is essentially the “combined spread plate” method described by Walter et al. (19) and was used to simplify interpretation of results. To determine whether the mobilization functions present in S17-1 were required, E. coli strain DH5α (tra mutant) transformed with pTAP6 was used as a donor. To determine whether donor cells must be viable, concentrated S17-1(pTAP6) was heated to 80°C for 20 min under anaerobic conditions prior to being plated, which decreased donor viable counts >10,000-fold (<105/ml). To test if transformation could be achieved with naked DNA (via natural competence of M. maripaludis) and if the transferred plasmid must be inside the donor cell, 4 μg purified pTAP6 was plated along with S17-1 containing no intracellular plasmid. To test for inhibition by DNase, 250 U (0.2 ml of 1,250 Kunitz units/ml in McCas medium) of DNase I (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) was spread on plates immediately prior to plating; the efficacy of DNase under assay conditions was confirmed (see the supplemental material). To determine if cell-to-cell contact was required, 20-μl aliquots of the donor and recipient were spread either on the same or opposite sides of a 0.45-μm nylon filter laid on the plate surface. In all other cases, 20-μl aliquots of donor and recipient cells were spread on a section of the plate ∼50 mm in diameter, consistent with the size of the nylon filters. Transformants were observed only with live S17-1(pTAP6) as a donor, with or without DNase on plates and only when the donor and recipient were not separated by the nylon filter, at frequencies ranging from 0.4 × 10−6 to 2 × 10−6 per recipient cell or 0.5 × 10−6 to 3 × 10−7 per donor cell (Table (Table22).

TABLE 2.

Requirements for transformation of M. maripaludis by E. colia
E. coli donorPlasmid in donorTreatmentNo. of Purr colonies observedbEfficiency per recipient (n = 4)c
S17-1pTAP6None28, 27, 26, 32(3.8 ± 0.8) × 10−7
S17-1pTAP6250 U DNase I spread on plates24, 26, 16, 52(3.9 ± 1.3) × 10−7
S17-1pTAP6Both donor and recipient plated on a 0.45-μm filter129, 170, 180, 167(2.1 ± 0.5) × 10−6
S17-1pTAP6Donor and recipient separated by a 0.45-μm filter0, 0, 0, 0< (3.3 ± 0.7) × 10−9
S17-1pTAP6Heat-killed donor (80°C for 20 min)0, 0, 0, 0< (3.3 ± 0.7) × 10−9
S17-1pTAP5None0, 0, 0, 0< (3.3 ± 0.7) × 10−9
DH5α (Tra)pTAP6None0, 0, 0, 0< (3.3 ± 0.7) × 10−9
S17-1NonePurified pTAP6 (4 μg) plated with donor0, 0, 0, 0< (3.3 ± 0.7) × 10−9
NoneNANo donor0, 0, 0, 0< (3.3 ± 0.7) × 10−9
S17-1pTAP6No recipient0, 0, 0, 0NA
Open in a separate windowaAll data are from a single experiment, where each treatment was performed in quadruplicate. Approximately 8 × 107 recipient cells were used, with donor/recipient ratios ranging from 7:1 to 13:1. NA, not applicable.bThe number of Purr M. maripaludis colonies observed on each plate.cEfficiency represents the mean number of Purr colonies per viable recipient cell (±standard error of the mean). When no Purr colonies were observed, the efficiency is shown as being less than the calculated efficiency observed from one Purr colony ± the error in determining the total number of viable recipients.In summary, this work demonstrated that the transformation of M. maripaludis by E. coli displayed all of the hallmarks of conjugation: oriT was required in cis on the plasmid to be transferred, mobilization functions were required in the donor cell, the plasmid had to be inside the donor cells, donor cells had to be viable, cell-to-cell contact was required, and DNase I had no effect on the transformation. This shows that conjugation between Bacteria and Archaea can occur, thereby expanding the phylogenetic range of recipients that can be transformed using the RP4 conjugal-transfer system. Although the process described here is less efficient than standard PEG-mediated transformation of M. maripaludis (18), it is less laborious and may be useful for routine transformation of this methanogen. This approach may also prove fruitful for establishing genetic systems in other methanogens and Archaea.   相似文献   

19.
The streptococcal plasmid pMV158 encodes the relaxase protein, MobM, involved in its mobilisation. Purified MobM protein specifically cleaved supercoiled or single-stranded DNA containing the plasmid origin of transfer, oriT. Gel retardation and DNase I footprinting assays performed with DNA fragments containing the plasmid oriT provided evidence for specific binding of MobM by oriT DNA. Dissection of the MobM-binding sequence revealed that the oriT region protected by MobM spanned 28 nucleotides, and includes an inversely repeated sequence, termed IR2. MobM exhibits a high degree of similarity with the mob gene product of the Streptococcus ferus plasmid pVA380-1. Although the origins of transfer of pMV158 and pVA380-1 show 20% sequence divergence in a 24-bp sequence included in their oriT regions, the pMV158 MobM was able to cleave a supercoiled derivative of pVA380-1 in vitro.  相似文献   

20.
Positive-strand RNA viruses genome replication invariably is associated with vesicles or other rearranged cellular membranes. Brome mosaic virus (BMV) RNA replication occurs on perinuclear endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membranes in ~70 nm vesicular invaginations (spherules). BMV RNA replication vesicles show multiple parallels with membrane-enveloped, budding retrovirus virions, whose envelopment and release depend on the host ESCRT (endosomal sorting complexes required for transport) membrane-remodeling machinery. We now find that deleting components of the ESCRT pathway results in at least two distinct BMV phenotypes. One group of genes regulate RNA replication and the frequency of viral replication complex formation, but had no effect on spherule size, while a second group of genes regulate RNA replication in a way or ways independent of spherule formation. In particular, deleting SNF7 inhibits BMV RNA replication > 25-fold and abolishes detectable BMV spherule formation, even though the BMV RNA replication proteins accumulate and localize normally on perinuclear ER membranes. Moreover, BMV ESCRT recruitment and spherule assembly depend on different sets of protein-protein interactions from those used by multivesicular body vesicles, HIV-1 virion budding, or tomato bushy stunt virus (TBSV) spherule formation. These and other data demonstrate that BMV requires cellular ESCRT components for proper formation and function of its vesicular RNA replication compartments. The results highlight growing but diverse interactions of ESCRT factors with many viruses and viral processes, and potential value of the ESCRT pathway as a target for broad-spectrum antiviral resistance.  相似文献   

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