Abstract

A cloned 270-nucleotide fragment from the origin region of the M13 duplex replicative form DNA confers an M13-dependent replication mechanism upon the plasmid vector pBR322. This M13 insert permits M13 helper-dependent replication of the hybrid plasmid in polA cells which are unable to replicate the pBR322 replicon alone. Using in vitro techniques, we have constructed several plasmids containing deletions in the M13 DNa insert. The endpoints of these deletions have been determined by DNA sequence analysis and correlated with the transformation and replication properties of each plasmid. Characterization of these deletion plasmids allows the following conclusions. (i) The initiation site for M13 viral strand replication is required for helper-dependent propagation of the chimeric plasmid. (ii) A DNA sequence in the M13 insert, localized between 89 and 129 nucleotides from the viral strand initiation site, is necessary for efficient transformation of polA cells. A chimeric plasmid containing the viral strand initiation site, but lacking this additional 40 nucleotide M13 sequence, transforms helper-infected cells at a frequency approximately 10(4)-fold less than that of plasmids containing this additional DNA segment. (iii) The entire M13 complementary strand origin can be deleted without affecting M13-dependent transformation by the hybrid plasmids. We propose a model in which replication of one strand of duplex chimera initiates by nicking at the gene II protein nicking site in the viral strand of the M13 insert, followed by asymmetric single-strand synthesis. Initiation of the complementary strand possibly occurs within plasmid sequences.

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