Abstract
Shigella sonnei contains repetitive sequences, including an insertion element IS 1, which can be isolated as double-stranded DNA fragments by DNA denaturation and renaturation and by treatment with S 1 nuclease. In this paper, we describe a method of cloning the IS 1 fragments prepared by the S 1 nuclease digestion technique into phage M13mp8 RFI DNA. Several clones contained IS 1, usually with a few additional bases. We isolated and characterized five other repetitive sequences using this method. One sequence, 1264 base-pairs in length, had terminal inverted repeats and contained two open reading frames. This sequence, called IS600, showed about 44% sequence homology with IS3 and was repeated more than 20 times in the Sh. sonnei chromosome. Another sequence (named IS629, 1310 base-pairs in length), which was repeated six times, was found also to be related to IS3 and thus IS600. Two other sequences (named IS630 and IS640, 1159 and 1092 base-pairs in length, respectively), which were repeated approximately ten times, had characteristic terminal inverted repeats and contained a large open reading frame coding for a protein. The inverted repeat sequences of IS630 were similar to the sequence at one end of IS200, a Salmonella-specific IS element. The fifth sequence, repeated ten times in Sh. sonnei, had about 98% sequence homology with a portion of IS 2. The method described here can be applied to the isolation of IS or iso-IS elements present in any other bacterial chromosome.
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