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1.
Abstract When conjugative transfer of lactose-fermenting ability (Lac) was observed between Streptococcus cremoris UC653 (donor) and S. lactis MG1363 Sm (recipient), 70% of the Lac+ transconjugants had acquired total resistance to phage 712 and propagated phage C2 at a lower efficiency and with a reduced plaque size. Plasmid analysis of transconjugants combined with curing experiments showed that the Lac and phage resistance markers were associated with plasmids of 26 and 50 MDa, respectively. Some transconjugants contained a large plasmid of either 77 or 83 MDa which coded for both Lac and phage resistance. The phage resistance mechanism did not act at the adsorption stage and was not affected by incubation at 37°C.  相似文献   

2.
Conjugal transfer of lactose-fermenting ability (Lac+), nisin resistance (Nisr), and phage resistance (Hsp+) was demonstrated in matings between Streptococcus lactis ME2 (donor) and Streptococcus cremoris M43a (recipient), a derivative of M12R. Transconjugants were detected by transfer of Lac+ and were found to exhibit Nisr and harbor a 40-megadalton plasmid (pTR1040). Fifty-six percent of Lac+ transconjugants were resistant to the S. cremoris M12R lytic phage. Efficiency of plaquing for phage m12r . M12 on a phage-resistant transconjugant, T2r-M43a, was less than 4.3 X 10(-10). Five additional phages which were virulent for S. cremoris M12R and isolated from industrial sources failed to plaque on S. cremoris T2r-M43a. Mating experiments with T2r-M43a revealed that phage resistance was accompanied by high-frequency conjugation ability (Tra+) and the appearance of both pTR1040 and pTR2030 encoding Lac+ Nisr and Tra+ Hsp+, respectively, in transconjugants of S. lactis LM2302. Phage-sensitive Lac+ transconjugants of S. cremoris M43a (T2s-M43a) showed no conjugal ability. These observations confirmed that pTR2030 was present and responsible for the phage resistance and conjugal ability exhibited by the S. cremoris transconjugant T2r-M43a. Unlike the S. lactis LM2302 transconjugant carrying pTR2030, resistance of T2r-M43a to phage was not affected at high temperatures (35 to 40 degrees C) or destabilized in repeated transfers through a starter culture activity test. These results demonstrated that phage resistance conferred by pTR2030 in the S. cremoris transconjugant was effective against industrially significant phages under fermentation conditions normally encountered during cheese manufacture.  相似文献   

3.
Conjugal transfer of lactose-fermenting ability (Lac+), nisin resistance (Nisr), and phage resistance (Hsp+) was demonstrated in matings between Streptococcus lactis ME2 (donor) and Streptococcus cremoris M43a (recipient), a derivative of M12R. Transconjugants were detected by transfer of Lac+ and were found to exhibit Nisr and harbor a 40-megadalton plasmid (pTR1040). Fifty-six percent of Lac+ transconjugants were resistant to the S. cremoris M12R lytic phage. Efficiency of plaquing for phage m12r . M12 on a phage-resistant transconjugant, T2r-M43a, was less than 4.3 X 10(-10). Five additional phages which were virulent for S. cremoris M12R and isolated from industrial sources failed to plaque on S. cremoris T2r-M43a. Mating experiments with T2r-M43a revealed that phage resistance was accompanied by high-frequency conjugation ability (Tra+) and the appearance of both pTR1040 and pTR2030 encoding Lac+ Nisr and Tra+ Hsp+, respectively, in transconjugants of S. lactis LM2302. Phage-sensitive Lac+ transconjugants of S. cremoris M43a (T2s-M43a) showed no conjugal ability. These observations confirmed that pTR2030 was present and responsible for the phage resistance and conjugal ability exhibited by the S. cremoris transconjugant T2r-M43a. Unlike the S. lactis LM2302 transconjugant carrying pTR2030, resistance of T2r-M43a to phage was not affected at high temperatures (35 to 40 degrees C) or destabilized in repeated transfers through a starter culture activity test. These results demonstrated that phage resistance conferred by pTR2030 in the S. cremoris transconjugant was effective against industrially significant phages under fermentation conditions normally encountered during cheese manufacture.  相似文献   

4.
Streptococcus lactis ME2 exhibits at least three mechanisms which confer resistance to virulent bacteriophage. These include plasmid-induced interference with phage adsorption, host-controlled restriction and modification activities, and a heat-sensitive mechanism which suppresses development of virulent phage. Conjugal mating experiments were done with S. lactis ME2 to determine if phage-defence mechanisms present in this strain could be mobilized, associated with plasmid DNA elements and phenotypically characterized in transconjugants. Agar-surface matings of S. lactis ME2 with S. lactis LM0230 demonstrated that lactose-fermenting ability (Lac+) was transferred in a conjugation-like process at frequencies of 10(-6) per donor cell and was associated with a 40 MDal plasmid designated pTR1040. Resistance to nisin (Nisr) was acquired or lost simultaneously with Lac+, indicating that pTR1040 carried determinants for both phenotypes. Lac+ Nisr transconjugants that carried a 30 MDal plasmid (pTR2030) exhibited a heat-sensitive phage-defence mechanism (Hsp+) which limited the burst size and plaque size of phage c2 without altering the efficiency of plaquing (e.o.p.) or the level of adsorption. The ability of phage c2 to initiate plaquing at an e.o.p. of 1.0 indicated that DNA injection and early viral gene expression are not affected in the Hsp+ transconjugants. We suggest, therefore, that the Hsp+ phenotype may result from plasmid-induced abortive infection of phage dependent on the presence of pTR2030. Hsp+ transconjugants carrying pTR2030 also promoted high-frequency conjugal transfer of Lac+ Nisr associated with pTR1040 (greater than 10(-1) per donor cell). It was concluded that Hsp+ and determinants for conjugal transfer ability (Tra+) are located on pTR2030.  相似文献   

5.
Nisin-producing transconjugants were generated by mating nisin-producing strains of Lactococcus lactis subsp. lactis with derivatives of L. lactis subsp. lactis LM0230. The sucrose-utilizing ability and reduced bacteriophage sensitivity were also transferred with the nisin-producing character. Pulsed-field gel electrophoretic analysis of genomic DNA from donor, recipient, and nisin-producing transconjugants indicated that 68 kbp of DNA was transferred from the chromosome of the donor into the chromosome of the recipient in the conjugation process. The location of the transferred nisin structural gene spaN in the transconjugant HID500 was not stable, and cultures of strain HID500 were a mixture of different genotypes in which spaN was located at different positions in the chromosome on different SmaI fragments. ApaI, BglI, BssHII, NciI, SalI, and SmaI digests of genomic DNA were used to map the location of spaN in a donor (DL11) and a nisin-producing transconjugant (HID504).  相似文献   

6.
Nisin-producing transconjugants were generated by mating nisin-producing strains of Lactococcus lactis subsp. lactis with derivatives of L. lactis subsp. lactis LM0230. The sucrose-utilizing ability and reduced bacteriophage sensitivity were also transferred with the nisin-producing character. Pulsed-field gel electrophoretic analysis of genomic DNA from donor, recipient, and nisin-producing transconjugants indicated that 68 kbp of DNA was transferred from the chromosome of the donor into the chromosome of the recipient in the conjugation process. The location of the transferred nisin structural gene spaN in the transconjugant HID500 was not stable, and cultures of strain HID500 were a mixture of different genotypes in which spaN was located at different positions in the chromosome on different SmaI fragments. ApaI, BglI, BssHII, NciI, SalI, and SmaI digests of genomic DNA were used to map the location of spaN in a donor (DL11) and a nisin-producing transconjugant (HID504).  相似文献   

7.
A self-transmissible (Tra+) plasmid encoding determinants for restriction and modification activities (R+/M+) from Streptococcus lactis ME2 was isolated and characterized. The 28-kilobase (kb) plasmid (pTN20) was detected in lactose-fermenting (Lac+) transconjugants generated from matings between S. lactis N1, and ME2 variant, and a plasmid-free recipient, S. lactis LM2301. The plaquing efficiencies of prolate- and small isometric-headed phages were reduced on transconjugants containing either pTN20 (R+/M+ Tra+) or 100-kb plasmids encoding Lac+, R+/M+, and Tra+. Lac+ transconjugants which harbored pTR1040 (Lac+) and pTN20 (R+/M+) were phenotypically R-/M- and transferred Lac+ at low frequency in subsequent matings to give rise to 100-kb R+/M+ plasmids. R+/M+ activities and high-frequency conjugal transfer ability were detected in Lac+ transconjugants that contained pTR1041 (Lac+) and pTN20 (R+/M+). No 100-kb R+/M+ plasmids were recovered after these matings, suggesting that pTR1041 was mobilized by pTN20 through a process that resembled plasmid donation. pTR1041 was identical to pTR1040 but contained an additional 3.3-kb DNA fragment. These data suggested that phenotypic expression of R+/M+ and Tra+ is affected by coresident Lac+ plasmids. Restriction enzyme analysis and hybridization reactions demonstrated that the 100-kb R+/M+ plasmid was formed by a cointegration event between pTR1040 (Lac+) and pTN20 (R+/M+ Tra+) during conjugal transfer via a conductive-type process. This is the first report that defines self-transmissible restriction and modification plasmids in the lactic streptococci.  相似文献   

8.
An unusual, spontaneous, phage sk1-resistant mutant (RMSK1/1) of Lactococcus lactis C2 apparently blocks phage DNA entry into the host. Although no visible plaques formed on RMSK1/1, this host propagated phage at a reduced efficiency. This was evident from center-of-infection experiments, which showed that 21% of infected RMSK1/1 formed plaques when plated on its phage-sensitive parental strain, C2. Moreover, viable cell counts 0 and 4 h after infection were not significantly different from those of an uninfected culture. Further characterization showed that phage adsorption was normal, but burst size was reduced fivefold and the latent period was increased from 28.5 to 36 min. RMSK1/1 was resistant to other, but not all, similar phages. Phage sensitivity was restored to RMSK1/1 by transformation with a cloned DNA fragment from a genomic library of a phage-sensitive strain. Characterization of the DNA that restored phage sensitivity revealed an open reading frame with similarity to sequences encoding lysozymes (beta-1,4-N-acetylmuramidase) and lysins from various bacteria, a fungus, and phages of Lactobacillus and Streptococcus and also revealed DNA homologous to noncoding sequences of temperate phage of L. lactis, DNA similar to a region of phage sk1, a gene with similarity to tRNA genes, a prophage attachment site, and open reading frames with similarities to sun and to sequences encoding phosphoprotein phosphatases and protein kinases. Mutational analyses of the cloned DNA showed that the region of homology with lactococcal temperate phage was responsible for restoring the phage-sensitive phenotype. The region of homology with DNA of lactococcal temperate phage was similar to DNA from a previously characterized lactococcal phage that suppresses an abortive infection mechanism of phage resistance. The region of homology with lactococcal temperate phage was deleted from a phage-sensitive strain, but the strain was not phage resistant. The results suggest that the cloned DNA with homology to lactococcal temperate phage was not mutated in the phage-resistant strain. The cloned DNA apparently suppressed the mechanism of resistance, and it may do so by mimicking a region of phage DNA that interacts with components of the resistance mechanism.  相似文献   

9.
Streptococcus lactis subsp. diacetylactis strain WM4 transferred lactose-fermenting and bacteriocin-producing (Bac+) abilities to S. lactis LM2301, a lactose-negative, streptomycin-resistant (Lac- Strr), plasmid-cured derivative of S. lactis C2. Three types of transconjugants were obtained: Lac+ Bac+, Lac+ Bac-, and Lac-Bac+.S. diacetylactis WM4 possessed plasmids of 88, 33, 30, 5.5, 4.8, and 3.8 megadaltons (Mdal). In Lac+ Bac+ transconjugants, lactose-fermenting ability was linked to the 33-Mdal plasmid and bacteriocin-producing ability to the 88-Mdal plasmid. Curing the 33-Mdal plasmid from Lac+ Bac+ transconjugants resulted in loss of lactose-fermenting ability but not bacteriocin-producing ability (Lac- Bac+). These strains retained the 88-Mdal plasmid. Curing of both plasmids resulted in a Lac- Bac- phenotype. The Lac+ Bac- transconjugant phenotype was associated with a recombinant plasmid of 55 or 65 Mdal. When these transconjugants were used as donors in subsequent matings, the frequency of Lac transfer was about 2.0 X 10(-2) per recipient plated, whereas when Lac+ Bac+ transconjugants served as donors, the frequency of Lac transfer was about 2.0 X 10(-5) per recipient plated. Also, Lac- Bac+ transconjugants were found to contain the 88-Mdal plasmid. The data indicate that the ability of WM4 to produce bacteriocin is linked to an 88-Mdal conjugative plasmid and that lactose-fermenting ability resides on a 33-Mdal plasmid.  相似文献   

10.
Lactose-positive (Lac+) transconjugants resulting from matings between Streptococcus lactic ML3 and S. lactis LM2301 possess a single plasmid of approximately 60 megadaltons (Mdal) which is nearly twice the size of the lactose plasmid of the donor. The majority of these Lac+ transconjugants aggregated in broth and were able to transfer lactose-fermenting ability at a frequency higher than 10(-1) per donor on milk agar plates or in broth. Lac+ transconjugants which did not clump conjugated at a much lower frequency. Lactose-negative derivatives of Lac+ clumping transconjugants did not aggregate in broth and were missing the 60-Mdal plasmid. The ability to aggregates in broth was very unstable. Strains could lose the ability to clump but retain lactose-fermenting ability. The majority of these Lac+ nonclumping derivatives of clumping transconjugants contained a plasmid of approximately 33 Mdal, the size of the lactose plasmid of the original donor ML3. These strains transferred lactose-fermenting ability at a frequency of approximately 10(-6) per donor, resulting in both Lac+ clumping transconjugants which contained a 60-Mdal plasmid and Lac+ nonclumping transconjugants which possessed a 33-Mdal plasmid. Our results suggest that the genes responsible for cell aggregation and high-frequency conjugation are on the segment of deoxyribonucleic acid which recombined with the 33-Mdal lactose plasmid in S. lactis ML3.  相似文献   

11.
Present evidence indicates that lactose metabolism in group N streptococci is linked to plasmid deoxyribonucleic acid. Lactose-positive (Lac+) Streptococcus lactis and lactose-negative (Lac-) derivatives were examined for their resistance to various inorganic ions. Lac+ S. lactis strains ML3, M18, and C2 were found more resistant to arsenate (7.5- to 60.2-fold), arsenite (2.25- to 3.0-fold), and chromate (6.6- to 9.4-fold), but more sensitive to copper (10.0- to 13.3-fold) than their Lac- derivatives. These results suggested that genetic information for resistance and/or sensitivity to these ions resides on the "lactose plasmid." Kinetics of ultraviolet irradiation inactivation of transducing ability for lactose metabolism and arsenate resistance confirmed the plasmid location of the two markers. Lac+ transductants from S. lactis C2 received genetic determinants for resistance to arsenate, arsenite, and chromate but not for copper sensitivity. In this case, resistance markers were lost when the transductants became Lac- but the derivatives remained copper resistant. The resistant markers for arsenate and arsenite could not be identified as separate genetic loci, but chromate resistance and copper sensitivity markers were found to be independent genetic loci. The "lactose plasmid" from S. lactis C10 possessed the genetic loci for arsenate and arsenite resistance but not for chromate resistance or copper sensitivity.  相似文献   

12.
The Lactococcus lactis subsp. lactis KP3 Lac genetic element was investigated. KP3 is a lactose-positive (Lac+) transconjugant which contains no detectable plasmid DNA. The KP3 Lac genetic element was self-transmissible (Tra+) and encoded a reduced bacteriophage sensitivity (Rbs+) phenotype. Matings of KP3 with a recombination-deficient (Rec-) recipient resulted in Lac+ transconjugants which were phenotypically indistinguishable from KP3 and contained a 96-MDa plasmid (pJS96). Phenotypic and physical analyses of pJS96 indicated that it was a deletion derivative of a putative pKB32::pJS88 Lac+ Tra+ cointegrate. pKB32 is the Lac plasmid and pJS88 is the Tra+ Rbs+ plasmid in L. lactis subsp. lactis 11007, the donor used in obtaining KP3. The results presented suggest that pJS96 is an episome, since it appeared to replicate both as a plasmid and as an integrated part of the chromosome. Conjugal transfer of chromosomal DNA mediated by pJS96 was not observed. Conjugal transfer of pJS96 resulted in Lac+ transconjugants containing plasmids ranging in size from 21 to 90 MDa. Only in Rec+ recipients were transconjugants isolated which appeared to contain pJS96 integrated into the host chromosome. Restriction analysis of several plasmids in the 21 to 90 MDa range suggested the deletions were due to intramolecular transposition of a transposable element on pJS96. This report suggests that a self-transmissible episome exists in KP3 and provides an explanation of how plasmids which vary in size yet encode similar phenotypes may be formed and disseminated.  相似文献   

13.
Phage-resistant mutants, isolated from cultures of Lactococcus lactis subsp. lactis C2 infected with phage c2, did not form plaques but bound phage normally. The mutants were sensitive to another phage, sk1, although the number of plaques was reduced approximately 56% and the plaques were four times smaller. Binding to phage sk1 was reduced about 10%. Another group of phage-resistant mutants, isolated from cultures infected with phage sk1, bound normally to both phages c2 and sk1 but did not form plaques with either phage. Carbohydrate analyses by gas chromatography of the cell walls showed no significant differences in saccharide compositions between the wild-type and phage-resistant cells. However, a difference was observed in the interactions of the phage with the cytoplasmic membranes. Membranes from the wild-type cells, but not mutant cells, inactivated phage c2. Phage sk1 was not inactivated by membrane from either strain. Treatment of wild-type membranes with proteinase K eliminated the ability of the membrane to inactivate the phage, whereas treatment with mutanolysin had no effect. On the basis of this ability to inactivate the phage, a membrane protein was partially purified by gel filtration and ion-exchange chromatography. Under nondenaturing conditions, the phage-inactivating protein has an apparent Mr of approximately 350,000. The protein has an apparent subunit size of 32 kDa, which suggests that it normally exists as a multimer with 10 to 12 subunits or in association with other membrane components. It is proposed that this protein is required for phage c2 infection.  相似文献   

14.
Ten previously reported lactose-positive (Lac+) transconjugants from Streptococcus lactis, S. cremoris, and S. lactis subsp. diacetylactis and one sucrose-positive (Suc+) transconjugant from S. lactis were examined for their sensitivity to prolate- and small isometric-headed bacteriophages. Four of the Lac+ transconjugants showed a 10- to 100-fold reduction in the efficiency of plating (EOP) as well as a reduced plaque size for the prolate phage c2 and were insensitive to the small isometric phage 712. A fifth Lac+ transconjugant demonstrated a similar reduced sensitivity to phage c2; however, this transconjugant was able to plaque phage 712, but with a reduced plaque size and EOP. The other five Lac+ transconjugants were sensitive to both c2 and 712 phages. The Suc+ transconjugant plaqued phage 712 with a reduced plaque size and EOP, but no reduction in plaque size or EOP was observed for phage c2. The Lac+ and reduced bacteriophage sensitivity (Rbs+) phenotypes were correlated with specific plasmids in the Lac+ transconjugants. As four of the Lac+ transconjugants exhibited a phenotypically indistinguishable Rbs+, one (AB001) was selected for further study. The Rbs+ in AB001 for both small isometric- and prolate-headed phages was not related to adsorption, and the reduced EOP for phage c2 was not related to the presence of a restriction and modification system. The latent period for phage c2 was unchanged, but the burst size was reduced 80%. The presence of the plasmid coding for Rbs+ retarded the lysis of a mitomycin C-induced prophage-containing strain. The Rbs+ mechanism appears to be abortive phage infection. This study supports previous observations that Rbs+ and conjugal transfer ability are physically linked among some group N streptococci. The results presented have implications in the identification of plasmids coding for Rbs+ and may also aid in explaining the dissemination of Rbs+ genes among lactic streptococci.  相似文献   

15.
J L Steele  L L McKay 《Plasmid》1989,22(1):32-43
Conjugal transfer of genetic material by Lactococcus lactis subsp. lactis 11007 was examined. A plasmid of 88 MDa (pJS88) was identified in addition to the previously reported conjugally transferred plasmids of 32 (pKB32) and 4.8 MDa. Proteinase activity, reduced bacteriophage sensitivity, bacteriocin resistance, and conjugal transfer ability were encoded by pJS88. The ability to metabolize lactose (Lac+) was encoded by pKB32, and the 4.8-MDa plasmid was cryptic. When a strain containing both pKB32 and pJS88 was mated with a recipient deficient in host-mediated homologous recombination (Rec-), a plasmid of 40 MDa (pJS40) was observed in approximately 50% of the Lac+ transconjugants. DNA-DNA hybridization results indicated that pJS40 contained homology with both pKB32 and pJS88. These results indicated that pKB32 was conjugally transferred via conduction and suggested that pJS40 is a deletion derivative of a pKB32::pJS88 cointegrate. A Rec- strain containing pKB32 and pJS88 mediated Lac+ conjugal transfer, suggesting that the pKB32::pJS88 cointegrate could form via a rec-independent event. Resolution of the pKB32::pJS88 cointegrate was observed in both Rec- and Rec+ hosts. Cointegrate formation and resolution via rec-independent mechanisms suggest the involvement of a transposable element in the Tn3 family.  相似文献   

16.
Streptococcus lactis subsp. diacetylactis DRC3 was examined for plasmid DNA and found to contain a previously unreported plasmid of 40 X 10(6) daltons. This plasmid, designated pNP40, was conjugally transferred to a plasmid-cured derivative of S. lactis C2. Transconjugants containing pNP40 acquired resistance to nisin produced by strains of S. lactis and to commercially available nisin when assay plates were incubated at 21, 32, and 37 degrees C. In addition, c2 phage growth was completely restricted in transconjugants containing pNP40 at 21 and 32 degrees C, but not at 37 degrees C. This result suggests that pNP40 may be coding for a temperature-sensitive enzyme that restricts phage growth at 21 and 32 degrees C, but not at 37 degrees C. Eight consecutive transfers of a transconjugant containing pNP40 in Elliker broth at 37 degrees C resulted in 100% loss of resistance to c2 phage when colonies were tested at 32 degrees C. These phage-sensitive isolates had lost pNP40 and had also become sensitive to nisin. This result suggests that pNP40 may also be thermosensitive in its replication. The finding of a phage resistance determinant located on a conjugative plasmid should prove useful in constructing phage-resistant variants for dairy fermentation processes.  相似文献   

17.
Bacteriophage sk1 is a small isometric-headed lytic phage belonging to the 936 species. It infects Lactococcus lactis , a commonly used dairy starter organism. Nucleotide sequence data analysis indicated that the sk1 genome is 28 451 nucleotides long and contains 54 open reading frames (ORFs) of 30 or more codons, interspersed with three large intergenic regions. The nucleotide sequence of several of the sk1 ORFs demonstrated significant levels of identity to genes (many encoding proteins of unknown function) in other lactococcal phages of both small isometric-headed and prolate-headed morphotype. Based on this identity and predicted peptide structures, sk1 genes for the terminase, major structural protein and DNA polymerase have been putatively identified. Genes encoding holin and lysin were also identified, subcloned into an Escherichia coli expression vector, and their function demonstrated in vivo . The sk1 origin of replication was located by identifying sk1 DNA fragments able to support the maintenance in L. lactis of a plasmid lacking a functional Gram-positive ori . The minimal fragment conferring replication origin function contained a number of direct repeats and 179 codons of ORF47. Although no similarity between phage sk1 and coliphage λ at the nucleotide or amino acid sequence level was observed, an alignment of the sk1 late region ORFs with the λ structural and packaging genes revealed a striking correspondence in both ORF length and isoelectric point of the ORF product. It is proposed that this correspondence is indicative of a strong conservation in gene order within these otherwise unrelated isometric-headed phages that can be used to predict the functions of the sk1 gene products.  相似文献   

18.
Streptococcus lactis subsp. diacetylactis DRC3 was examined for plasmid DNA and found to contain a previously unreported plasmid of 40 X 10(6) daltons. This plasmid, designated pNP40, was conjugally transferred to a plasmid-cured derivative of S. lactis C2. Transconjugants containing pNP40 acquired resistance to nisin produced by strains of S. lactis and to commercially available nisin when assay plates were incubated at 21, 32, and 37 degrees C. In addition, c2 phage growth was completely restricted in transconjugants containing pNP40 at 21 and 32 degrees C, but not at 37 degrees C. This result suggests that pNP40 may be coding for a temperature-sensitive enzyme that restricts phage growth at 21 and 32 degrees C, but not at 37 degrees C. Eight consecutive transfers of a transconjugant containing pNP40 in Elliker broth at 37 degrees C resulted in 100% loss of resistance to c2 phage when colonies were tested at 32 degrees C. These phage-sensitive isolates had lost pNP40 and had also become sensitive to nisin. This result suggests that pNP40 may also be thermosensitive in its replication. The finding of a phage resistance determinant located on a conjugative plasmid should prove useful in constructing phage-resistant variants for dairy fermentation processes.  相似文献   

19.
A combination of plasmid curing and DNA-DNA hybridization data facilitated the identification of proteinase plasmids of 75 (pCI301) and 35 kilobases (pCI203) in the multi-plasmid-containing strains Lactococcus lactis subsp. lactis UC317 and L. lactis subsp. cremoris UC205, respectively. Both plasmids were transferred by conjugation to a plasmid-free background only after introduction of the conjugative streptococcal plasmid, pAMbeta1. All Prt transconjugants from matings involving either donor contained enlarged recombinant Prt plasmids. UC317-derived transconjugants were separable into different classes based on the presence of differently sized cointegrate plasmids and on segregation of the pCI301-derived Lac and Prt markers. All UC205-derived transconjugants harbored a single enlarged plasmid that was a cointegrate between pCI203 and pAMbeta1. The identification of prt genes on pCI301 and pCI203 derivatives was achieved by a combination of restriction enzyme and hybridization analyses.  相似文献   

20.
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