Abstract

As part of an effort to develop systems for genetic analysis of strains of Bacillus pumilus which are being used as a microbial hay preservative, we introduced the conjugative Enterococcus faecalis transposon Tn 916 into B. pumilus ATCC 1 and two naturally occurring hay isolates of B. pumilus. B. pumilus transconjugants resistant to tetracycline were detected at a frequency of approximately 6.5 × 10 −7 per recipient after filter mating with E. faecalis CG110. Southern hybridization confirmed the insertion of Tn 916 into several different sites in the B. pumilus chromosome. Transfer of Tn 916 also was observed between strains of B. pumilus in filter matings, and one donor strain transferred tetracycline resistance to recipients in broth matings at high frequency (up to 3.4 × 10 −5 per recipient). Transfer from this donor strain in broth matings was DNase-resistant and was not mediated by culture filtrates. Transconjugants from these broth matings contained derivatives of a cryptic plasmid (pMGD302, approx 60 kb) from the donor strain with Tn 976 inserted at various sites. The plasmids containing Tn 916 insertions transferred to a B. pumilus recipient strain at frequencies of approx 5 × 10 −6 per recipient. This evidence suggests that pMGD302 can transfer by a process resembling conjugation between strains of B. Pumilus.

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