Abstract

Plasmid pSC101 is neither self-transmissible nor efficiently mobilized (made to transfer) by the Escherichia coli F factor. When fragments of F factor DNA were inserted into pSC101 the resulting chimeric plasmids were mobilized by the F factor at enhanced frequencies. These chimeric plasmids, which were not self-transmissible, fell into three classes according to their relative ability to be mobilized by an autonomous or integrated F factor: (1) class I pSC101-F chimeric plasmids contain the origin of transfer of the F factor ( oriT) and were mobilized in trans at an efficiency nearly equal to that of F factor transfer; (2) class II pSC101-F chimeric plasmids lacked both oriT and the origin of vegetative F replication ( oriV1), and were mobilized in cis via fusion with the F factor in a recA-dependent recombination to yield a transferable co-integrated plasmid; (3) class III pSC101-F chimeric plasmids lacked oriT but contained oriV1 and were mobilized in cis via co-integration with the F factor probably at oriV1 in a recA-independent recombination. A fourth class of mobilization event, not exhibited by pSC101-F chimeric plasmids, was also observed. Mobilization of pBR322 and pSC101 occurred in cis via transposon-mediated recA-independent fusion with F. On the basis of these results we present a general classification scheme of non-conjugative plasmids and also suggest mechanisms for their mobilization.

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