## Abstract The copy numbers of __Flac__, four Fβlike plasmids and pLT2 were estimated in two strains of __Salmonella typhimurium__ and (for all except pLT2) one strain of __Escherichia coli.__ For organisms grown in casamino acids minimal medium, the plasmids spanned a 7β8 fold range of copy numbe
An effect of F-like plasmids on the maintenance of Flac in a dnaC mutant of Salmonella typhimurium
β Scribed by Rodriguez Lemoine, V. ;Rowbury, R. J.
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1977
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 640 KB
- Volume
- 156
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0026-8925
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Flac maintenance was aberrant at permissive temperature in a temperature-sensitive dnaC mutant of Salmonella typhimurium when the normally resident pLT2 plasmid was present. Flac was, however, efficiently transferred into the dnaC pLT2+ strain and the resulting Flac derivative was almost as efficient in transferring Flac as was dnaC+ pLT2+ Flac strains indicating that aberrant Flac maintenance was not associated with appreciable inhibition of transfer replication. A range of F-like plasmids behaved like pLT2 in causing aberrant Flac maintenance when present in the dnaC pLT2- strain. Flac was, however, stably maintained in the dnaC strain in the absence of other plasmids. Although the F-like plasmids destabilized Flac, each was stably maintained when introduced into strain 11G dnaC pLT2+ and pLT2 was also apparently stable under these conditions. The destabilizing effect of pLT2 and other fi+ plasmids was not consequent upon their inhibiting the formation of a repressible F transfer component needed for Flac replication in the dnaC strain. Incompatibility between Flac and the other plasmids induced by the dnaC lesion also appeared unlikely to be a cause of the aberrant Flac maintenance. The possibility is discussed that the initiation of Flac replication differs from that of pLT2 and the F-like plasmids with F competing less effectively than the others for the DnaC gene product.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
An E. coli strain which carries a mutation conferring clorobiocin resistance and temperature sensitivity for growth has recently been described and evidence has been presented suggesting that the mutation is located in the gyrB gene (Orr et al. 1979). The replication of the ColE1 plasmid was analyse