Abstract

To study recombination between short homologous sequences in Escherichia coli we constructed plasmids composed of the pBR322 replicon, M13 replication origin and a recombination unit inserted within and inactivating a gene encoding chloramphenicol resistance. The unit was composed of short direct repeats (9, 18 or 27 bp) which flanked inverted repeats (0, 8 or 308 bp) and a gene encoding kanamycin resistance. Recombination between direct repeats restored a functional chloramphenicol resistance gene, and could be detected by a simple phenotype test. The plasmids replicated in a double-stranded form, using the pBR322 replicon, and generated single-stranded DNA when the M13 replication origin was activated. The frequency of chloramphenicol-resistant cells was low (10(-8)-10(-4] when no single-stranded DNA was synthesized but increased greatly (to 100%) after induction of single-stranded DNA synthesis. Recombination between 9 bp direct repeats entailed no transfer of DNA from parental to recombinant plasmids, whereas recombination between 18 or 27 bp repeats entailed massive transfer. The presence or length of inverted repeats did not alter the pattern of DNA transfer. From these results we propose that direct repeats of 9 bp recombine by a copy choice process, while those greater than or equal to 18 bp can recombine by a breakage-reunion process. Genome rearrangements detected in many organisms often occur by recombination between sequences less than 18 bp, which suggests that they may result from copy choice recombination.

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