Abstract

Pathogenic strains of Pseudomonas glycinea were shown to possess plasmid deoxyribonucleic acid by dye-buoyant density gradient centrifugation. The size and number of plasmids of four different isolates were determined by neutral sucrose gradient centrifugation. Two isolates were found to harbor a single plasmid; however, they differed in size, having molecular weights of 43 X 10(6) and 54 X 10(6). Two other isolates each contained two different plasmids. Plasmids with molecular weights of 43 X 10(6) and 73 X 10(6) were observed in one isolate, and the other carried plasmids with molecular weights of 25 X 10(6) and 87 X 10(6). An auxotrophic mutant derived from the latter strain was found to contain plasmids of identical size. The plasmids were found to be under stringent control of replication, having plasmid copies of 1.0 to 2.7 per chromosome equivalent. By the dye-cesium chloride technique, the mutant showed twice as much covalently closed circular deoxyribonucleic acid as did the parental strain.

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