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1.
Naturally occurring plasmids isolated from heterotrophic bacterial isolates originating from coastal California marine sediments were characterized by analyzing their incompatibility and replication properties. Previously, we reported on the lack of DNA homology between plasmids from the culturable bacterial population of marine sediments and the replicon probes specific for a number of well-characterized incompatibility and replication groups (P. A. Sobecky, T. J. Mincer, M. C. Chang, and D. R. Helinski, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 63:888–895, 1997). In the present study we isolated 1.8- to 2.3-kb fragments that contain functional replication origins from one relatively large (30-kb) and three small (<10-kb) naturally occurring plasmids present in different marine isolates. 16S rRNA sequence analyses indicated that the four plasmid-bearing marine isolates belonged to the α and γ subclasses of the class Proteobacteria. Three of the marine sediment isolates are related to the γ-3 subclass organisms Vibrio splendidus and Vibrio fischeri, while the fourth isolate may be related to Roseobacter litoralis. Sequence analysis of the plasmid replication regions revealed the presence of features common to replication origins of well-characterized plasmids from clinical bacterial isolates, suggesting that there may be similar mechanisms for plasmid replication initiation in the indigenous plasmids of gram-negative marine sediment bacteria. In addition to replication in Escherichia coli DH5α and C2110, the host ranges of the plasmid replicons, designated repSD41, repSD121, repSD164, and repSD172, extended to marine species belonging to the genera Achromobacter, Pseudomonas, Serratia, and Vibrio. While sequence analysis of repSD41 and repSD121 revealed considerable stretches of homology between the two fragments, these regions do not display incompatibility properties against each other. The replication origin repSD41 was detected in 5% of the culturable plasmid-bearing marine sediment bacterial isolates, whereas the replication origins repSD164 and repSD172 were not detected in any plasmid-bearing bacteria other than the parental isolates. Microbial community DNA extracted from samples collected in November 1995 and June 1997 and amplified by PCR yielded positive signals when they were hybridized with probes specific for repSD41 and repSD172 replication sequences. In contrast, replication sequences specific for repSD164 were not detected in the DNA extracted from marine sediment microbial communities.  The maintenance and horizontal transfer of extrachromosomal elements provide one mechanism by which microbial communities can rapidly adapt to changes in environmental conditions. This adaptation can be in the form of plasmid rearrangements and duplications (18, 40), a change in the plasmid copy number (40, 54), or lateral or horizontal movement of plasmids within bacterial populations. An example demonstrating the importance of plasmid-mediated genetic adaptation in natural microbial communities, likely caused by lateral transfer, is the increased frequencies (2- to 10-fold) of catabolic plasmids reported in bacterial isolates obtained from polluted marine and freshwater environments compared to isolates from nonpolluted or less impacted ecosystems (8, 23, 43). Plasmids also play a major role in promoting the widespread distribution of antibiotic resistance genes attributed to the intense and increased use of antibiotics (42).The ability of plasmids to self-transfer or to be mobilized by transfer-proficient plasmids and the ability to replicate in different bacterial hosts are key factors in the spread of plasmid-encoded genes within microbial communities. Plasmids which are considered to have broad host ranges in nature have the potential to significantly affect the microbial community structure and function due to their ability to replicate and be maintained in members of distantly related genera. Thus, to better understand gene flux in natural systems and hence the potential role of plasmids in promoting horizontal transfer within microbial communities, knowledge of the distribution, diversity, and host ranges of naturally occurring plasmids is necessary.At present, most indigenous plasmids from marine and freshwater systems have been only partially characterized with respect to host range, replication mechanisms, incompatibility groups, and conjugal abilities. Plasmids containing similar or related replication systems are considered incompatible if they cannot coexist in a host cell (12, 41). This trait has facilitated the grouping of plasmids from gram-negative bacteria, mainly members of the family Enterobacteriaceae, into more than 30 different incompatibility groups (3). While molecularly based plasmid classification or replicon typing by using DNA sequences of replication origins and incompatibility loci of well-characterized plasmids has been useful in classifying plasmids from bacterial isolates of medical importance (9, 10, 14), plasmids from various marine microbial communities, including sediments, biofilms, bulk water, and the marine air-water interface, have been recently shown to contain incompatibility and replication regions unrelated to those currently defined (11, 53).The present study was undertaken to characterize, at the molecular level, the replication and incompatibility loci of naturally occurring plasmids isolated from gram-negative marine heterotrophs for use as replicon probes to classify and type, at the molecular level, plasmids present in bacterial populations of marine sediments. Replication origins were obtained from plasmids ranging in size from 6 to 30 kb isolated from culturable bacteria of coastal California marine sediments (53). Phylogenetic analysis indicated that the plasmids were initially isolated from bacteria belonging to the α and γ-3 subclasses of the class Proteobacteria. Although a sequence and hybridization analysis of the replication origins from the marine plasmids confirmed the lack of homology with previously described plasmids, the replication regions contained features commonly found in previously characterized plasmid replication origins. The replication origins of the naturally occurring plasmids appear to have a broad host range, as indicated by their ability to replicate in members of diverse gram-negative marine genera. In addition to molecular characterization of the indigenous plasmids, the persistence of the replicons in marine sediment bacterial populations was determined by PCR amplification of microbial community DNA extracted on different dates and examined for the presence of homologous plasmid replication sequences.  相似文献   

2.
Molecular homology and incompatibility in the IncFI plasmid Group   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
The usual grounds for the inclusion of a plasmid in a particular incompatibility group are its mutual incompatibility with a type plasmid of that group, and, in some cases, the demonstration of shared regions of specific homology, presumed to be related to DNA replication. We have found that some plasmids classified as IncFI on genetical grounds share no homology with the previously described incompatibility regions of F on the basis of hybridization of specific radioactive probes to restriction enzyme digests of DNA from these plasmids. Others show homology with some or all of the regions of the F plasmid that can express incompatibility. The incompatibility behaviour of these plasmids has been examined to determine the relationship between the possession of regions of homology and the expression of incompatibility. Three plasmids, ColV3-K30, pHH507 and Entp307, show homology only with the secondary replicon of F and appear to use sequences homologous with the secondary F replicon in their replication. The results are consistent with the propositions that some contemporary IncFI plasmids arose by the integration of several replicons, and, in general, the replicon not being used for replicon expresses its incompatibility, as does the replicon being used for replication. We conclude that incompatibility of two plasmids with F does not necessarily demonstrate relatedness of the plasmids to each other, and that inclusion within the IncFI group can result from the possession of any of several combinations of inc sequences.  相似文献   

3.
The replication and maintenance properties of the broad-host-range plasmid RK2 and its derivatives were examined in nine gram-negative bacterial species. Two regions of RK2, the origin of replication (oriV) and a segment that encodes for a replication protein (trfA delta kilD, designated trfA*), are sufficient for replication in all nine species tested. However, stable maintenance of this minimal replicon (less than 0.3% loss per generation under nonselection conditions) is observed only in Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Pseudomonas putida, and Azotobacter vinelandii. Maintenance of this minimal replicon is unstable in Rhizobium meliloti, Agrobacterium tumefaciens, Caulobacter crescentus, Acinetobacter calcoaceticus, and Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides. A maintenance function has been localized to a 3.1-kilobase (kb) region of RK2 encoding three previously described functions: korA (trfB korB1 korD), incP1-(II), and korB. The 3.1-kb maintenance region can increase or decrease the stability of maintenance of RK2 derivatives dependent on the host species and the presence or absence of the RK2 origin of conjugal transfer (oriT). In the case of A. calcoaceticus, stable maintenance requires an RK2 segment that includes the promoter and the kilD (kilB1) functions of the trfA operon in addition to the 3.1-kb maintenance region. The broad-host-range maintenance requirements of plasmid RK2, therefore, are encoded by multiple functions, and the requirement for one or more of these functions varies among gram-negative bacterial species.  相似文献   

4.
Two plasmids, 76 and 148 kb in size, isolated from Ruegeria strain PR1b were entirely sequenced. These are the first plasmids to be characterized from this genus of marine bacteria. Sequence analysis revealed a biased distribution of function among the putative proteins encoded on the two plasmids. The smaller plasmid, designated pSD20, encodes a large number of putative proteins involved in polysaccharide biosynthesis and export. The larger plasmid, designated pSD25, primarily encodes putative proteins involved in the transport of small molecules and in DNA mobilization. Sequence analysis revealed uncommon potential replication systems on both plasmids. pSD25, the first repABC-type replicon isolated from the marine environment, actually contains two repABC-type replicons. pSD20 contains a complex replication region, including a replication origin and initiation protein similar to iteron-containing plasmids (such as pSW500 from the plant pathogen Erwinia stewartii) linked to putative RepA and RepB stabilization proteins of a repABC-type replicon and is highly homologous to a plasmid from the phototrophic bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides. Given the nature of the putative proteins encoded by both plasmids it is possible that these plasmids enhance the metabolic and physiological flexibility of the host bacterium, and thus its adaptation to the marine sediment environment.  相似文献   

5.
A 0.7-kb segment of the broad host range plasmid RK2 containing the replication origin of this plasmid will replicate in Escherichia coli and Pseudomonas putida when this segment is joined to a 1.8-kb region of RK2 designated traA*. The presence of another region of RK2, designated trfB, that previously was implicated in RK2 replication had no effect on the maintenance of the RK2 trfA*-oriV replicon in these two organisms. These observations indicate a requirement for a minimal account of information for replication of this broad host range plasmid in two distantly related bacteria.  相似文献   

6.
《Gene》1998,207(2):119-126
A novel transformation technique, resident plasmid integration, for the cloning of foreign DNA in oral streptococci was described recently (T. Shiroza and H. K. Kuramitsu, Plasmid, 1995, 34, 85–95). This technique is based on the integration of linearized foreign genes by recombination-proficient bacteria onto a resident plasmid, if an appropriate selection marker is flanked by the same anchor sites present in the resident plasmid. Since the transforming vehicles for this system included a pUC-derived replication origin, the high level expression in Escherichia coli cells hindered the cloning of certain genes. In the present study, new plasmids were constructed, two resident plasmids, four integration plasmids, and four cloning plasmids, all of which possess the medium-copy number replication origin, p15A ori, isolated from pACYC177. The resident plasmids consisted of the following three components: the p15A ori (0.65-kb BglII fragment), the pVA380-1 basic replicon functional in mutans streptococci (2.5-kb BamHI fragment), and either an erythromycin resistance or a spectinomycin resistance gene (0.9- or 1.1-kb BamHI fragment, respectively). Most of the basic replicon of pVA380-1, except for the 3′-portion of the 0.2-kb region, in the resident plasmid was replaced with a kanamycin resistance gene to construct the four integration plasmids. Therefore, the upstream and downstream anchor sites for the double cross-over event in this new system were 0.65-kb p15A ori and the 0.2-kb portion of the 3′-end of pVA380-1 replicon, respectively. This system was used to clone the gene coding for cycloisomaltooligosaccharide glucanotransferase which produces cycloisomaltooligosaccharide, a potent inhibitor of oral streptococcal glucosyltransferase, isolated from Bacillus circulans chromosome, into Streptococcus gordonii, and its gene product was successfully secreted into the culture media. Plasmids described here should be useful tools for introducing heterologous DNA into resident plasmids following integration in oral streptococci.  相似文献   

7.
The transposition properties of the Pseudomonas aeruginosa mutator bacteriophage D3112 were exploited to develop an in vivo cloning system. Mini-D replicon derivatives of D3112 were constructed by incorporating broad host range plasmid replicons between short terminal D3112 sequences. These elements were made with small replication regions from the RK2, Sa, and pVS1 plasmids and selectable genes for tetracycline, carbenicillin, kanamycin, and gentamicin resistance. Some of the mini-D replicons also contain the RK2 oriT origin-of-transfer sequence, which allows them to be mobilized by conjugation to many different species of gram-negative bacteria. These elements were used to clone DNA by preparing lysates from P. aeruginosa cells harboring an inducible D3112 cts prophage and a mini-D replicon plasmid. These lysates were used to infect sensitive P. aeruginosa recipients and select recombinant plasmids as drug-resistant transductant colonies. These transductants form a gene library from which particular clones can be selected, such as by their ability to complement specific mutations. This system was used to clone nine different genes from the PAO chromosome. The ability of this system to precisely identify a gene was demonstrated by isolating clones of the argF+ and cys-59+ genes. Restriction maps of clones of these genes, which have different amounts of flanking DNA, located the positions of these genes. The sizes of the chromosomal DNA segments from 10 individual clones examined ranged from 6 to 21 kilobases (kb), with an average of about 10 kb. This is consistent with the approximately 40-kb DNA-packaging size of the D3112 phage.  相似文献   

8.
Abstract The presence of plasmid encoded resistance to fostomycin among enterobacteriaceae isolated from sewage was studied. These plasmids found were classified into 7 varieties according to their original host, size, resistance determinants, restriction pattern and incompatibility group. All of them were related to the Inc M group, indicating a probable common origin from an ancestral replicon. The bacteria carrying these plasmids modified fosfomycin as did those carrying fosfomycin resistant (For) hospital plasmids. The plasmids showed positive hybridization with a 1-kb DNA fragment which carried a For-determinant from a hospital plasmid.  相似文献   

9.
By cloning fragments of plasmid DNA, we have shown that RK2 expresses incompatibility by more than one mechanism. One previously identified (R. J. Meyer, Mol. Gen, Genet. 177:155--161, 1979; Thomas et al., Mol. Gen. Genet. 181:1--7, 1981) determinant for incompatibility is linked to the origin of plasmid DNA replication. When cloned into a plasmid vector, this determinant prevents the stable inheritance of a coresident RK2. However, susceptibility to this mechanism of incompatibility requires an active RK2 replicon and is abolished if another replicator is provided. We have also cloned a second incompatibility determinant, encoded within the 54.1- to 56.4-kilobase region of RK2 DNA, which we call IncP-1(II). An RK2 derivative remains sensitive to IncP-1(II), even when it is not replicating by means of the RK2 replicon. The 54.1- to 56.4-kilobase DNA does not confer susceptibility to the IncP-1(II) mechanism, nor does it encode a detectable system for efficient plasmid partitioning. The incompatibility may be related to the expression of genes mapping in the 54.1- to 56.4-kilobase region, which are required for plasmid maintenance and suppression of plasmid-encoded killing functions.  相似文献   

10.
A 5.8-kb fragment of the large conjugative plasmid pAW63 from Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. kurstaki HD73 containing all the information for autonomous replication was cloned and sequenced. By deletion analysis, the pAW63 replicon was reduced to a 4.1-kb fragment harboring four open reading frames (ORFs). Rep63A (513 amino acids [aa]), encoded by the largest ORF, displayed strong similarity (40% identity) to the replication proteins from plasmids pAMbeta1, pIP501, and pSM19035, indicating that the pAW63 replicon belongs to the pAMbeta1 family of gram-positive theta-replicating plasmids. This was confirmed by the facts that no single-stranded DNA replication intermediates could be detected and that replication was found to be dependent on host-gene-encoded DNA polymerase I. An 85-bp region downstream of Rep63A was also shown to have strong similarity to the origins of replication of pAMbeta1 and pIP501, and it is suggested that this region contains the bona fide pAW63 ori. The protein encoded by the second large ORF, Rep63B (308 aa), was shown to display similarity to RepB (34% identity over 281 aa) and PrgP (32% identity over 310 aa), involved in copy control of the Enterococcus faecalis plasmids pAD1 and pCF10, respectively. No significant similarity to known proteins or DNA sequences could be detected for the two smallest ORFs. However, the location, size, hydrophilicity, and orientation of ORF6 (107 codons) were analogous to those features of the putative genes repC and prgO, which encode stability functions on plasmids pAD1 and pCF10, respectively. The cloned replicon of plasmid pAW63 was stably maintained in Bacillus subtilis and B. thuringiensis and displayed incompatibility with the native pAW63. Hybridization experiments using the cloned replicon as a probe showed that pAW63 has similarity to large plasmids from other B. thuringiensis subsp. kurstaki strains and to a strain of B. thuringiensis subsp. alesti.  相似文献   

11.
Summary Many plasmids belonging to the F incompatibility groups contain more than one basic replicon. The chimeric plasmid pCG86 is an example of such a multireplicon plasmid. The two basic replicons of pCG86, RepFIIA/FIC and RepFIB have been cloned and re-ligated, the copy numbers of the clones have been determined, and the incompatibility behavior of plasmids containing the ligated replicons and the individual replicons has been studied. The bireplicon plasmids are not expected to be incompatible as recipients with monoreplicon RepFIB or RepFIIA/RepFIC plasmids, since when one replicon is challenged by an incoming replicon, the other should be able to handle the plasmid's replication. In our studies, we found that challenge with either monoreplicon plasmid resulted in incompatibility. This incompatibility was increased in bireplicon plasmids in which RepFIB was duplicated. We conclude that in the bireplicon plasmids, challenging the replication control of one replicon by an incompatible plasmid can interfere with the replication originating from the second replicon.  相似文献   

12.
13.
The minimum pColV-K30 REPI region necessary for replication was located within a ca. 1.3-kilobase DNA segment. Adjacent to the essential replication sequences, there are two DNA regions that express incompatibility with plasmids containing the F secondary replicon of the F EcoRI fragment f7. One of these regions corresponds to incE, already described in that F plasmid fragment which expresses incompatibility with f7-containing plasmids. The other is a novel sequence that we designated incF, which confers incompatibility with REPI, P307, and f7 derivatives, cis-acting pColV-K30 sequences conferring stability to REPI-containing plasmids were also identified and localized noncontiguous to REPI, ca. 20 kilobases downstream from the aerobactin iron transport genes, which were thus flanked by REPI and its partition (par) sequences.  相似文献   

14.
Location of rep and inc sequences in the F secondary replicon   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
R Gardner  J McAnulty  E Feher  D Lane 《Plasmid》1985,13(2):145-148
Miniplasmids derived by deletion of DNA from the F plasmid secondary replicon have been tested for the ability to replicate and to express incompatibility with the IncFI plasmid, ColV3-K30. The results demonstrate that the minimal rep region of the secondary replicon lies within a 1.9-kb sequence (33.7F-35.6F kb), and that an inc region, presumably involved in replication control, is present in a 0.45-kb portion of the rep region (33.7F-34.15F kb). In addition, the secondary replicon was found not to require DNA polymerase I activity.  相似文献   

15.
We have examined the DNA homology in the replication regions of 10 IncP plasmids independently isolated from several different countries. Two regions of RK2, the best-studied plasmid of this group, are required for vegetative DNA replication: the origin of replication (oriV) and the trfA region, which codes for a gene product necessary for replication. Six of nine IncP plasmids studied were identical to RK2 in the oriV and trfA regions as shown by Southern hybridization. Three P plasmids, R751, R772, and R906, showed weaker homology with the RK2 trfA, region and hybridized to different-sized HaeII fragments than the other six plasmids. R751, R772, and R906 hybridized to the region of the RK2 replication origin which expresses P incompatibility but differed markedly from RK2 and the other six plasmids in the GC-rich region of the origin required for replication. These data indicate that the P-group plasmids can be divided into two subgroups: IncP alpha, which includes the RK2-like plasmids, and IncP beta which includes the R751-like plasmids.  相似文献   

16.
Summary The relationship between replication control and plasmid incompatibility has been investigated using a composite replicon, pPM1, which consists of the pSC101 plasmid ligated to another small multicopy plasmid, RSF1050. Since pPM1 can utilise the replication system of either of the two functionally distinct components, propagation of the composite plasmid can occur in the presence of a mutation of one of its moieties. Such mutants are detected by their inability to rescue the composite plasmid under conditions not permissive for replication of the other moiety. Mutations in incompatibility functions can be detected by the failure of the composite replicon to exclude co-existing plasmids carrying a replication system identical to the one on pPM1.The inability of the composite plasmid to replicate at 42° in a host synthesizing temperature-sensitive DNA polymerase I, which is required by the RSF1050 replication system, was used to isolate pPM1 mutants defective in replication of the pSC101 component. Mutants defective in the incompatibility functions of pSC101 were obtained by selecting derivatives that allow the stable coexistence of a second pSC101 replicon in the same cell. Analysis of these two classes of mutants indicates that plasmids selected for defective pSC101 replication ability nevertheless retain pSC101 incompatibility. In contrast, plasmid mutants that have lost incompatibility functions were found always to be defective in replication ability.  相似文献   

17.
A Scordaki  C Drainas 《Plasmid》1990,23(1):59-66
Plasmid pZMO3 of Zymomonas mobilis strain ATCC 10988 was found to be nonhomologous either to chromosomal DNA or to any other plasmids of the strains ATCC 10988, NCIB 11163, and CP4. It contained single sites for the restriction endonucleases SphI, BglI, and HindIII, as well as at least four sites for Sau3A. Its origin of replication is located within the 1.54-kb Sau3A fragment as it was found that only the recombinant plasmid pDS3154, which contained this fragment, showed vectorial incompatibility with the native pZMO3 plasmid. The stability of pZMO3 may be controlled by partitioning sequences located in the 0.64-kb Sau3A fragment. Z. mobilis isolates, which had lost plasmid pZMO3, were successfully isolated.  相似文献   

18.
Forty-six of 52 (88.5%) enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC) strains screened carried a "common" plasmid of about 90 kb which encoded sequences homologous to the Inc F-IIA replicon. A similarly high incidence of Inc F-IIA plasmid-containing strains was observed in other groups of diarrheagenic E. coli, but not in random environmental coliform isolates. Enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC) contain plasmids of similar properties and share a 23-kb DNA fragment with plasmids from EHEC. The common region encodes the F-IIA replication region and sequences homologous to the transfer operon of the Inc F-II plasmid R1. Sequence homology varied between plasmids isolated from different EHEC/EPEC strains with > 80% showing homology to the regions encoding the rep and par genes. Only 5% of plasmids from EHEC strains had intact sequences homologous to the DNA between these two regions, including the oriT site. Some plasmids with an apparently intact tra operon still failed to plaque F-pilus-specific phages. This is consistent with observations that the large plasmids of EHEC and EPEC are phenotypically nonconjugative. These results suggest that the large plasmids of EHEC/EPEC constitute a family of transfer-deficient Inc F-IIA plasmids with varying degrees of deletion in tra function. The evolutionary ramifications of this finding are considered.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
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