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1.
We report a model system for plasmid transfer analysis using the regulated lambda phage right promoter, λPr, fused to luc and lucOR as repoter genes. We have demonstrated that the systems cI857-λPr::luc and cI857-λPr::lucOR are temperature-inducible in Escherichia coli but not in other Gram-negative bacteria analyzed, enabling detection of luminescence when plasmids were mobilized from E. coli to those Gram-negative backgrounds. Using light for the detection, we have observed plasmid transfer from E. coli harboring RK2 and R388 derived plasmids to Pseudomonas putida KT2440 (co-introduced with donors) and to indigenous microorganisms, in vitro and in nonsterile soil microcosms. The importance of nutrients for an efficient plasmid transfer in nonsterile soil microcosms has been confirmed. When plasmid transfer experiments were carried out into nonsterile soil microcosms, significant populations of indigenous transconjugants arose. This system provides efficient marker genes and avoids the use of antibiotics for the selection of transconjugants.  相似文献   

2.
When the highly metal-resistant acidophilic heterotrophic strain, Acidiphilium symbioticum KM2, was incubated with two Escherichia coli strains, viz. S17-1 (pSUP106) and K12, on a medium that supported growth of these two divergent species of different habitats, E. coli transconjugants were isolated that contained novel plasmids and were resistant to Zn2+ (48 mM), Cu2+ (12 mM), Ni2+ (12 mM), chloramphenicol (50 μg/ml), and tetracycline (25 μg/ml). The transconjugant plasmids did not hybridize with any of the A. symbioticum KM2 plasmids. After curing of the plasmids, the transconjugants became sensitive to 12 mM Zn2+, 12 mM Cu2+, and 12 mM Ni2+, but remained chloramphenicol and tetracycline resistant—the phenotypic markers that were originally present in pSUP106. That a part of pSUP106 was integrated into the chromosome of the transconjugants was evident from the hybridization of pSUP106 with chromosomal DNA of the cured derivatives of the transconjugants. Further, the transconjugant plasmids hybridized only with the chromosomal DNA of E. coli S17-1 and not with the chromosomal DNA of A. symbioticum KM2 or E. coli K12, suggesting their host chromosomal origin. Thus, the present study describes a unique event of genetic rearrangements in the E. coli strain S17-1 (pSUP106), resulting in the formation of novel plasmids conferring metal-resistance phenotypes in the cell. Received: 5 April 2002 / Accepted: 5 July 2002  相似文献   

3.
Abstract: Escherichia coli recipient and E. coli donor strains carrying streptothricin-resistance genes were inoculated together into different soil microcosms. These genes were localized on the narrow host range plasmids of incompatibility (Inc) groups FII, Il, and on the broad host range plasmids of IncP1, IncN, IncW3, and IncQ. The experiments were intended to study the transfer of these plasmids in sterile and non-sterile soil with and without antibiotic selective pressure and in planted soil microcosms. Transfer of all broad host range plasmids from the introduced E. coli donor into the recipient was observed in all microcosm experiments. These results indicate that broad host range plasmids encoding short and rigid pili might spread in soil environments by conjugative transfer. In contrast, transfer of the narrow host range plasmids of IncFII and IncI1, into E. coli recipients was not found in sterile or non-sterile soil. These plasmids encoded flexible pili or flexible and rigid pili, respectively. In all experiments highest numbers of transconjugants were detected for the IncP1-plasmid (pTH16). There was evidence with plasmids belonging to IncP group transferred by conjugation into a variety of indigenous soil bacteria at detectable frequencies. Significantly higher numbers of indigenous transconjugants were obtained for the IncP-plasmid under antibiotic selection pressure, and a greater diversity of transconjugants was detected. Availability of nutrients and rhizosphere exudates stimulated transfer in soil. Furthermore, transfer of the IncN-plasmid (pIE1037) into indigenous bacteria of the rhizosphere community could be detected. The transconjugants were determined by BIOLOG as Serratia liquefaciens . Despite the known broad host range of IncW3 and IncQ-plasmids, transfer into indigenous soil bacteria could not be detected.  相似文献   

4.
The gut of the soil microarthropod Folsomia candida provides a habitat for a high density of bacterial cells (T. Thimm, A. Hoffmann, H. Borkott, J. C. Munch, and C. C. Tebbe, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 64:2660–2669, 1998). We investigated whether these gut bacteria act as recipients for plasmids from Escherichia coli. Filter mating with E. coli donor cells and collected feces of F. candida revealed that the broad-host-range conjugative plasmid pRP4-luc (pRP4 with a luciferase marker gene) transferred to fecal bacteria at estimated frequencies of 5.4 × 10−1 transconjugants per donor. The mobilizable plasmid pSUP104-luc was transferred from the IncQ mobilizing strain E. coli S17-1 and less efficiently from the IncF1 mobilizing strain NM522 but not from the nonmobilizing strain HB101. When S17-1 donor strains were fed to F. candida, transconjugants of pRP4-luc and pSUP104-luc were isolated from feces. Additionally, the narrow-host-range plasmid pSUP202-luc was transferred to indigenous bacteria, which, however, could not maintain this plasmid. Inhibition experiments with nalidixic acid indicated that pRP4-luc plasmid transfer took place in the gut rather than in the feces. A remarkable diversity of transconjugants was isolated in this study: from a total of 264 transconjugants, 15 strains belonging to the alpha, beta, or gamma subclass of the class Proteobacteria were identified by DNA sequencing of the PCR-amplified 16S rRNA genes and substrate utilization assays (Biolog). Except for Alcaligenes faecalis, which was identified by the Biolog assay, none of the isolates was identical to reference strains from data banks. This study indicates the importance of the microarthropod gut for enhanced conjugative gene transfer in soil microbial communities.Gene transfer is a process by which bacterial populations substantially increase their rates of evolution and adaptation (12, 59). Particularly, plasmid-located genes, which are transferred by conjugation from donor to recipient cells, can disseminate rapidly between even phylogenetically different bacterial groups (17, 36, 41) and microbial communities in different spatial habitats (34, 71). Such microbial genetic networks should be considered in risk assessments of releases of genetically engineered microorganisms into the environment (22, 37, 43). The probability and rate of plasmid transfer from a donor to indigenous microorganisms in a given habitat are influenced by plasmid-borne genes which determine the type of transfer mechanism (self-transmissible or mobilizable) and the host range of autonomous plasmid replication. Additionally, specific physicochemical conditions, such as temperature, water potential, and the availability of energy (substrates) for donor and recipient cells, are important factors influencing gene transfer rates in terrestrial and aquatic environments (23, 53, 64).The spread of plasmid-borne genes is still extremely difficult to predict for terrestrial habitats, since a large variety of microhabitat conditions which are not well characterized exists. In bulk soil under laboratory conditions, conjugative gene transfer from recombinant bacterial donor strains to indigenous soil bacteria has been found only under specific selective conditions or on rare occasions (11, 20, 24, 27, 50, 61). Several studies failed to detect such transfer events, and it was concluded that heterogeneity and low densities of recipient cells, as well as a lack of substrates for microbial metabolism, prevented efficient plasmid transfer in bulk soil (19, 49, 54, 75). Plant exudates increased rates of gene transfer in soil (33, 48), and higher rates of gene transfer were found in rhizospheres than in bulk soil (50, 61). It was assumed that other microsites which favor gene transfer in terrestrial habitats are associated with soil invertebrates (74). However, to date little experimental evidence to prove this assumption is available.Intraspecies transconjugants of added Enterobacter cloacae donor and recipient cells could be isolated from microcosm experiments with the variegated cutworm, Peridroma saucia, and plant material (2). The investigators in that study concluded that gene transfer events happened, most likely, in the digestive tracts or in the feces of the insects. Another recent report demonstrated that a conjugative plasmid was transferred between fed Escherichia coli strains in the guts of Rhabditis nematodes (1). Earthworms mediated transport and enhanced plasmid transfer from added donor cells to added recipients and to indigenous bacteria in soil (14, 15). High rates of intraspecies plasmid transfer, comparable to those obtained in pure broth cultures, were detected with Bacillus thuringiensis in infected lepidopterous larvae (31).Microarthropods (collembolans and mites) are the most abundant invertebrate group in the majority of soils (5) but have not been recognized, so far, for their impact on microbial gene transfer. There are some indications that microarthropods harbor a large variety of microorganisms in their guts and thereby contribute to microbial biodiversity in terrestrial environments (7, 9, 57). In the accompanying paper, we have described the gut of Folsomia candida (Collembola) as a habitat and species-specific vector for microorganisms (67). The gut of this soil-dwelling insect, which has a volume of only several nanoliters, was found to be densely colonized, predominantly by rod-shaped bacterial cells. We were interested to know whether such bacterial cells act as recipients for plasmids and thereby promote gene transfer in microbial communities. F. candida feeds, under natural conditions, on bacteria (3), fungal mycelia (6, 66), and nematodes (35). Here, we report on the results of experiments in which plasmid-bearing E. coli strains were fed to F. candida in microcosms. Self-transferable plasmids, as well as mobilizable plasmids with different host ranges, and a nonmobilizable plasmid were included in this study in order to determine the specific capacities of these different classes of plasmids to spread into indigenous bacterial populations. For detection purposes, all plasmids were engineered by the insertion of the luciferase-encoding marker gene luc or lux (30, 47).  相似文献   

5.
Prior to gene transfer experiments performed with nonsterile soil, plasmid pJP4 was introduced into a donor microorganism, Escherichia coli ATCC 15224, by plate mating with Ralstonia eutropha JMP134. Genes on this plasmid encode mercury resistance and partial 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D) degradation. The E. coli donor lacks the chromosomal genes necessary for mineralization of 2,4-D, and this fact allows presumptive transconjugants obtained in gene transfer studies to be selected by plating on media containing 2,4-D as the carbon source. Use of this donor counterselection approach enabled detection of plasmid pJP4 transfer to indigenous populations in soils and under conditions where it had previously not been detected. In Madera Canyon soil, the sizes of the populations of presumptive indigenous transconjugants were 107 and 108 transconjugants g of dry soil−1 for samples supplemented with 500 and 1,000 μg of 2,4-D g of dry soil−1, respectively. Enterobacterial repetitive intergenic consensus PCR analysis of transconjugants resulted in diverse molecular fingerprints. Biolog analysis showed that all of the transconjugants were members of the genus Burkholderia or the genus Pseudomonas. No mercury-resistant, 2,4-D-degrading microorganisms containing large plasmids or the tfdB gene were found in 2,4-D-amended uninoculated control microcosms. Thus, all of the 2,4-D-degrading isolates that contained a plasmid whose size was similar to the size of pJP4, contained the tfdB gene, and exhibited mercury resistance were considered transconjugants. In addition, slightly enhanced rates of 2,4-D degradation were observed at distinct times in soil that supported transconjugant populations compared to controls in which no gene transfer was detected.  相似文献   

6.
Summary Strain JC5466 of Escherichia coli K12 harbouring the nitrogen fixation plasmid pCE1 was lysogenized with bacteriophage Mu cts, followed by partial induction and infection with bacteriophage PRD1. This made it possible to obtain transfer-defective derivatives of pCE1, carrying Mu prophage. These derivatives could be mobilized by using the helper plasmid pME400 and it was possible to segregate the helper plasmid from the donor plasmid in the transconjugants.By incubating the strains 302 and 328 at 42°C, for induction of Mu prophage, derivatives with different plasmid contents could be obtained such as strains without plasmids, some with smaller or larger plasmids and others possessing plasmids without any visible alteration in size. Integration of the nitrogen-fixation (nif) genes into the chromosomes of the strains without plasmids and those containing a smaller plasmid, was confirmed by Southern hybridization using radioactive nifKDH DNA. Conjugation assays have shown that the plasmid is integrated into the chromosome as a unit but that it can also be excised.  相似文献   

7.
Summary Experiments conducted in microcosms containing loam soil samples inoculated with eitherE. coli orPseudomonas spp. donor and recipient cells showed that bacterial cells survived and conjugated over a 24-h incubation period.E. coli transconjugants were detected 6 h after donor and recipient strains were introduced into sterile soil samples. In non-sterile soil samples, transconjugants were detected between 8 and 24 h incubation.Pseudomonas transconjugants were recovered from sterile soil samples between 6 and 12 h after their introduction and as early as 2 h in non-sterile soil. The results show that genetic interactions occur in non-sterile soil in relatively short periods of time at relatively high transfer frequencies (10–3 to 10–4). Studies on genetic interactions in soil are becoming necessary in risk assessment/environmental impact studies prior to the release of genetically engineered or modified organisms into uncontained environments.  相似文献   

8.
Abstract Survival and potential ability to act as recipient or donor during the survival process for one plasmid-free and four plasmid-bearing Escherichia coli strains under nonilluminated and illuminated conditions in freshwater systems were studied. The five E. coli strains showed the same behavior with respect to the microbial parameters used to characterize the survival process (culturability and viability). Under nonilluminated conditions, recipient cells did not show variation in the ability to receive and express plasmid material, while the culturability of the recipient strain remained stable. Under the same conditions, donor cells lost their ability for plasmid transfer during the survival process, in all cases more than a 90% decrease of the number of transconjugants was found after 4 days of experimentation, although viable and culturable cells of donor strains maintained the capacity to express some plasmidic genes. Under illuminated conditions, transconjugants were not detected after 2 days of experimentation. The number of transconjugants formed was dependent not only on the time donor strains remained in the water but also on the temperature (20 or 37°C) at which the mating assays were conducted. Received: 15 August 1995; Accepted: 28 November 1995  相似文献   

9.
Plasmids belonging to the IncU incompatibility group are mobile genetic elements isolated frequently from Aeromonas spp. These plasmids share structural and functional characteristics and often carry Class-1 integrons bearing antibiotic resistance genes. In this work the ability of two IncU plasmids, pAr-32 and pRAS1 to establish in different A. hydrophila strains after conjugal transfer was studied. In vitro transfer frequencies on solid surface ranged from 10−1 to 10−6 for pAr-32 and from 10−3 to 10−5 for pRAS1. While carrying out these experiments we detected four strains unable to acquire plasmid pRAS1, indicating that the genetic background of recipients affects the establishment of the plasmid. We explored the possible reasons why these strains failed to yield transconjugants after mating experiments using A. salmonicida 718 as a donor. Factors included donor cell recognition, incompatibility, surface exclusion and restriction of incoming DNA. We found that none of these factors could explain the refractivity of non-receptive A. hydrophila strains to yield transconjugants. Although we do not know the reasons of this refractivity, we may speculate that these isolates lack a product necessary to replicate or stabilize plasmid pRAS1. Alternatively, these strains could contain a product that impedes plasmid establishment.  相似文献   

10.
Bdellovibrio and like organisms (BALOs) form the group of predatory bacteria which require Gram-negative bacteria as prey. Genetic studies with Bdellovibrio bacteriovorus can be performed with vectors which are introduced into the predator via conjugation. The usefulness of the two vectors pSUP202 and pSUP404.2 as genetic tools were assessed. Both vectors were transferable into B. bacteriovorus by conjugative matings with an Escherichia coli K12 strain as donor. The transfer frequency was higher for vector pSUP404.2 (approx. 10−1–10−4) as for pSUP202 (approx. 10−5–10−6). Vector pSUP202 with a pMB1 origin is unstable in the predatory bacterium, whereas pSUP404.2 is stably maintained in the absence of selective antibiotics. pSUP404.2 harbors two plasmid replicons, the p15A ori and the RSF1010 replication region The copy number of pSUP404.2 was determined by quantitative PCR in B. bacteriovorus and averages seven copies per genome. pSUP404.2 harbors two resistance genes (chloramphenicol and kanamycin) which can be used for cloning either by selection for transconjugants or by insertional inactivation.  相似文献   

11.
During interspecies matings betweenBacillus subtilisandBacillus thuringiensissubsp.israelensis,transfer of conjugative transposon Tn916was detected at a frequency of 1.1 × 10−4transconjugants per donor. Tn916-dependent transfer of plasmids pC194 and pE194 was detected at frequencies of 1.4 × 10−5and 3.2 × 10−7transconjugants per donor, respectively. Similar frequencies were obtained during parallel matings with otherwise isogenic strains that contain Tn925instead of Tn916. Tn916- or Tn925-dependent transfer of plasmids pC194 or pUB110 from the recipient to the donor (retrotransfer) was not observed during inter- or intraspecies matings. Transposon-mediated plasmid transfer by Tn916and Tn925is a Rec independent event. Thus, the data from studies in which otherwise isogenic donor and recipient strains were used indicated that Tn916and Tn925are, from a functional point of view, much more similar than previously suggested.  相似文献   

12.
Exogenous plasmid isolation was used to assess the presence of mobilizing plasmids in several soils and activated sludges. Triparental matings were performed with Escherichia coli (a member of the γ subgroup of the Proteobacteria) as the donor of an IncQ plasmid (pMOL155, containing the heavy metal resistance genes czc: Cor, Znr, and Cdr), Alcaligenes eutrophus (a member of the β subgroup of the Proteobacteria) as the recipient, and indigenous microorganisms from soil and sludge samples as helper strains. We developed an assay to assess the plasmid mobilization potential of a soil ecosystem on the basis of the number of transconjugants obtained after exogenous isolations. After inoculation into soil of several concentrations of a helper strain (E. coli CM120 harboring IncP [IncP1] mobilizing plasmid RP4), the log numbers of transconjugants obtained from exogenous isolations with different soil samples were a linear function of the log numbers of helper strain CM120(RP4) present in the soils. Four soils were analyzed for the presence of mobilizing elements, and mobilizing plasmids were isolated from two of these soils. Several sludge samples from different wastewater treatment plants yielded much higher numbers of transconjugants than the soil samples, indicating that higher numbers of mobilizing strains were present. The mobilizing plasmids isolated from Gent-O sludge and one plasmid isolated from Eislingen soil hybridized to the repP probe, whereas the plasmids isolated from Essen soil did not hybridize to a large number of rep probes (repFIC, repHI1, repH12, repL/M, repN, repP, repT, repU, repW, repX). This indicates that in Essen soil, broad-host-range mobilizing plasmids belonging to other incompatibility groups may be present.  相似文献   

13.
Transfer of bacteria/yeast shuttle plasmids from Escherichia coli into the yeast species Kluyveromyces lactis, Pichia angusta (Hansenula polymorpha), and Pachysolen tannophilus has been accomplished, presumably through inter-kingdom conjugal transfer. Plasmid pEK2 was transferred into a K. lactis mutant to complement trp auxotrophy, while plasmid YEp13 was mobilized into and complemented P. angusta and P. tannophilus Leu- auxotrophs. Plasmid DNA in the recipient strains was detected by transformation of E. coli with crude yeast cell extracts. Freely replicating plasmids without detectable alterations as well as plasmids with rearrangements were recovered from yeast transconjugants.  相似文献   

14.
We tested the transfer of several plasmids and transposons from Escherichia coli to Pasteurella multocida by filter mating. Two plasmids, pRKTV5 (pRK2013::Tn7) and pUW964 (pRKTV5::Tn5), were derived from pRK2013--a narrow-host-range plasmid with the broad-host-range IncP conjugation genes. Most P. multocida transconjugants obtained with pRKTV5 had Tn7 insertions in the chromosome but some had insertions of the whole plasmid. By contrast, all the transconjugants obtained with pUW964 had insertions of this plasmid or a deleted variant. pUW964 mediated low-frequency transfer of Tn7 or chromosomal markers between P. multocida strains. Broad-host-range IncP plasmid RP4 (RK2) did not yield selectable transconjugants in P. multocida but two plasmids derived by Tn5 insertion into a kanamycin-sensitive derivative of RP4 did yield transconjugants. pSUP1011, a narrow-host-range p15A replicon with the RP4 mob region allowing mobilization by the IncP conjugation genes also yielded transconjugants while several other plasmids tested did not transfer markers to P. multocida.  相似文献   

15.
Streptomyces parvulus was used as the recipient for plasmid pIJ303 and pIJ211, two conjugative plasmids derived from the self-transmissible plasmid pIJ101. One of the resulting transconjugantS. parvulus strains containing plasmid pIJ303 was used withS. lividans to evaluate the effects of the host strain on the frequency of pIJ303 transfer betweenStreptomyces species. Only 30% ofS. parvulus cells acquired plasmid pIJ303 in crosses in whichS. lividans was the donor, whereas 100% ofS. lividans cells acquired the plasmid whenS. parvulus was the donor. This indicates that the frequency of transfer of the conjugative plasmid was determined by the recipient. The other resulting transconjugantS. parvulus strain containing plasmid pIJ211 was evaluated for its ability to mobilize the nonconjugative plasmid pIJ702 fromS. lividans, on agar and in sterile soil. AfterS. lividans containing pIJ702 was crossed on agar and in sterile soil withS. parvulus containing pIJ211, recombinantS. parvulus colonies carrying pIJ702 and expressing pigments characteristic of both species were recovered, from both agar and soil. Although a large percentage ofS. parvulus transconjugants lost pIJ211 during incubation in soil, the mobilization of pIJ702 fromS. lividans intoS. parvulus still occurred. Plasmid integration into the chromosome of the donor and the transconjugant was evaluated by Southern blot hybridization. Hybridization of plasmid pIJ303, with chromosomal DNA fromS. lividans andS. parvulus transconjugants, using biotinylated DNA, indicated that no integration had occurred. Genetic exchange betweenStreptomyces species also occurred in a liquid medium. The finding of plasmid mobilization in soil is significant. It demonstrates that genetic exchange in the environment can occur between released genetically engineeredStreptomyces species and nativeStreptomyces species that contain conjugative plasmids.Paper of the Idaho Agricultural Experiment Station.  相似文献   

16.
H Neve  A Geis    M Teuber 《Journal of bacteriology》1984,157(3):833-838
Thirteen bacteriocin-producing strains of group N (lactic acid) streptococci were screened for their potential to transfer this property by conjugation to Streptococcus lactis subsp. diacetylactis Bu2-60. Bacteriocin production in three strains was plasmid encoded as shown by conjugal transfer and by analysis of cured, bacteriocin-negative derivatives of the donor strains and the transconjugants. With Streptococcus cremoris strains 9B4 and 4G6 and S. lactis subsp. diacetylactis 6F7 as donors, bacteriocin-producing transconjugants were isolated with frequencies ranging from ca. 2 X 10(-2) to 2 X 10(-1) per recipient cell. Bacteriocin-producing transconjugants had acquired a 39.6-megadalton plasmid from the donor strains 9B4 and 4G6, and a 75-megadalton plasmid from the donor strain 6F7. As shown by restriction endonuclease analysis, the plasmids from strains 9B4 and 4G6 were almost identical. The plasmid from strain 6F7 yielded some additional fragments not present in the two other plasmids. In hybridization experiments any of the three plasmids strongly hybridized with each other and with some other bacteriocin but nontransmissible plasmids from other S. cremoris strains. Homology was also detected to a variety of cryptic plasmids in lactic acid streptococci.  相似文献   

17.
Mobilization frequencies of the nonconjugative plasmid pMON5003 were quantified using Escherichia coli TB1(pRK2013) as donor of a helper plasmid, E. coli M182 (pMON5003) as donor of the nonconjugative plasmid, and Pseudomonas fluorescens as recipient. Initial mating experiments were conducted in nutrient and minimal salts media and pea seed exudates. Mobilization rates were higher during early stationary growth of donors, helpers, and recipients. Numbers of transconjugants were higher in biparental matings when donors contained both conjugative and nonconjugative plasmids, versus tri-parental matings. A mathematical model was developed to predict a nonconjugative plasmid transfer rate parameter (δ), estimating the proportion of conjugative matings in which a plasmid is mobilized. Values of δ ranged from 8 × 10−3 to 7.9 × 10−1. Transfer frequencies for pMON5003 from E. coli to P. fluorescens on pea seeds and roots were determined. Transconjugants (P. fluorescens 2-79 (pMON5003)) were isolated from seeds, roots, and soil, but mobilization frequencies were lower than in liquid media.  相似文献   

18.
Summary Transposon Tn7 was inserted into wide host range plasmid pSUP202 and used as a suicide plasmid vehicle for transposon mutagenesis in Rhizobium leguminosarum. Tn7 is transposed with high frequency into the self-transmissible plasmid pJB5JI without affecting the transfer, nodulation and nitrogen fixation functions. Tn7 transposition provides a useful tool for marking symbiotic plasmids.  相似文献   

19.
In 11% of testedStreptococcus bovis strains a conjugative transfer of tetracycline resistance was observed when mating experiments were carried out on membrane filters. The recipient strain used wasS. bovis BM114 with chromosomal resistance to rifampicin. In addition, in two strains tetracycline resistance was transferred also to recipient strainEnterococcus faecium AL6. The transfer frequencies were in the range of 10−6 to 10−3. The donor strains were screened for the presence of plasmids and one up to four bands of plasmid DNA in all tested strains were revealed. In spite of that isolation of plasmid DNA was successful only in 53/4/114 transconjugants. Transconjugant 32/114 contained amylase activity which was higher than in the donor strain.  相似文献   

20.
A limitation of genetic studies of the rumen bacterium, Butyrivibrio fibrisolvens, has been the availability of suitable vectors and transfer systems. Using the conjugative tetracycline resistant transposon, Tn916, the Staphylococcus aureus plasmid, pUB110, and the pUB110-based shuttle vector, pUBLRS, a conjugative transfer system was developed for B. fibrisolvens. B. fibrisolvens donor strains H17c2 and H17c12, containing Tn916 and pUB110 or pUBLRS, respectively, were used in mating experiments with selected B. fibrisolvens strains. Kanamycin resistant transconjugants, containing pUB110, of strains 193, 194, and 195 were detected at a combined average frequency of 7.78 × 10-7 per donor and 1.11 × 10-5 per recipient. Transconjugants of strains 193 and 194, containing pUBLRS, were detected at an average frequency of 1.22 × 10-6 per donor and 4.70 × 10-8 per recipient. Southern hybridization analysis confirmed the presence of pUB110 and pUBLRS in transconjugants. Results indicated that Tn916 was necessary for mobilization of pUB110 as transconjugants were not detected when the transposon was absent from the donor strains. The ability to mobilize pUB110 and pUBLRS between B. fibrisolvens strains provides a conjugative transfer system that circumvents problems encountered with electroporation.  相似文献   

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