Peer-Reviewed Journal Details
Mandatory Fields
Boltner, D; MacMahon, C; Pembroke, JT; Strike, P; Osborn, AM
2002
September
Journal Of Bacteriology
R391: a conjugative integrating mosaic comprised of phage, plasmid, and transposon elements
Published
()
Optional Fields
SITE-SPECIFIC RECOMBINATION HORIZONTAL GENE-TRANSFER COMPLETE GENOME SEQUENCE ESCHERICHIA-COLI PATHOGENICITY ISLAND TRANSCRIPTIONAL ACTIVATOR STAPHYLOCOCCUS-AUREUS REGULATORY DIVERGENCE NUCLEOTIDE-SEQUENCE SHIGELLA-FLEXNERI
184
18
5158
5169
The conjugative, chromosomally integrating element R391 is the archetype of the IncJ class of mobile genetic elements. Originally found in a South African Providencia rettgeri strain, R391 carries antibiotic and mercury resistance traits, as well as genes involved in mutagenic DNA repair. While initially described as a plasmid, R391 has subsequently been shown to be integrated into the bacterial chromosome, employing a phage-like integration mechanism closely related to that of the SXT element from Vibrio cholerae O139. Analysis of the complete 89-kb nucleotide sequence of R391 has revealed a mosaic structure consisting of elements originating in bacteriophages and plasmids and of transposable elements. A total of 96 open reading frames were identified; of these, 30 could not be assigned a function. Sequence similarity suggests a relationship of large sections of R391 to sequences from Salmonella, in particular those corresponding to the putative conjugative transfer proteins, which are related to the IncHI1 plasmid R27. A composite transposon carrying the kanamycin resistance gene and a novel insertion element were identified. Challenging the previous assumption that IncJ elements are plasmids, no plasmid replicon was identified on R391, suggesting that they cannot replicate autonomously.
0021-9193
10.1128/JB.184.18.5158-5169.2002
Grant Details