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Gene conversion in the Escherichia coli RecF pathway: a successive half crossing-over model.
Authors:Kenji Yamamoto  Kohji Kusano  Noriko K Takahashi  Hiroshi Yoshikura and Ichizo Kobayashi
Institution:(1) Department of Bacteriology, Medical School, University of Tokyo, 7-3-1 Hongo, 113 Tokyo, Japan;(2) Department of Molecular Biology, Institute of Medical Science, University of TokyoZ, 4-6-1 Shiroganedai, 108 Tokyo, Japan;(3) National Children's Medical Research Center, 154 Tokyo, Japan;(4) Present address: Department of Bacteriology, The National Institute of Health (Yoken), 141 Tokyo, Japan
Abstract:Summary Gene conversion - apparently non-reciprocal transfer of sequence information between homologous DNA sequences - has been reported in various organisms. Frequent association of gene conversion with reciprocal exchange (crossing-over) of the flanking sequences in meiosis has formed the basis of the current view that gene conversion reflects events at the site of interaction during homologous recombination. In order to analyze mechanisms of gene conversion and homologous recombination in an Escherichia coli strain with an active RecF pathway (recBC sbcBC), we first established in cells of this strain a plasmid carrying two mutant neo genes, each deleted for a different gene segment, in inverted orientation. We then selected kanamycin-resistant plasmids that had reconstituted an intact neo + gene by homologous recombination. We found that all the neo + plasmids from these clones belonged to the gene-conversion type in the sense that they carried one neo + gene and retained one of the mutant neo genes. This apparent gene conversion was, however, only very rarely accompanied by apparent crossing-over of the flanking sequences. This is in contrast to the case in a rec + strain. or in a strain with an active RecE pathway (recBC sbcA). Our further analyses, especially comparisons with apparent gene conversion in the rec + strain, led us to propose a mechanism for this biased gene conversion. This ldquosuccessive half crossing-over modelrdquo proposes that the elementary recombinational process is half crossing;-over in the sense that it generates only one recombinant DNA duplex molecule, and leaves one or two free end(s), out of two parental DNA duplexes. The resulting free end is, the model assumes, recombinogenic and frequently engages in a second round of half crossing-over with the recombinant duplex. The products resulting from such interaction involving two molecules of the plasmid would be classified as belonging to the gene-conversion type without crossing-over. We constructed a dimeric molecule that mimics the intermediate form hypothesized in this model and introduced it into cells. Biased gene conversion products were obtained in this reconstruction experiment. The half crossing-over mechanism can also explain formation of huge linear multimers of bacterial plasmids, the nature of transcribable recombination products in bacterial conjugation, chromosomal gene conversion not accompanied by flanking exchange (like that in yeast mating-type switching), and antigenic variation in microorganisms.
Keywords:Homologous recombination  Plasmid linear multimer  Yeast mating-type switching  Antigenic variation
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