Abstract

A detailed physical map of the region of the IncFI plasmid ColV2-K94 containing the Rep1 replicon, a Tn903 transposon, and an inverted repeat structure (X1) with unknown properties was prepared by cloning restriction fragments into pBR325. Inserts carrying the 1.2 kb repeated sequence of X1, but not the IS903 sequence of Tn903, had a destabilizing effect on pBR325 and pBR322 plasmid maintenance. One of these derivatives, pWS139, was studied further and was shown to have elevated levels of multimeric DNA forms; this resulted in decreased copy number and plasmid instability, as multimerization reduces the effective number of randomly segregating plasmids per cell. A ColV2-K94 miniplasmid, which has a copy number much lower than that of ColE1-derived vectors, was also less stably inherited if it contained the X1 structure. This destabilizing effect of the X1 repeat sequence was dependent on the RecA function, but not the RecB or the RecC functions of the host. These results suggest that the inverted repeat sequence of the X1 structure serves as a 'hot-spot' for generalized recombination. Thus, when present in cis, this sequence can generate plasmid instability because plasmid molecules are readily converted into multimeric forms through enhanced recombination at this site.

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