Abstract

We have previously shown that concurrent progression of pBR322 replication and pTac-directed transcription in opposite orientations induces illegitimate recombination events. We tested here the effects of M13 rolling circle replication on the incidence of plasmid deletions. The progression of the M13 replication fork leads to an increase of more than 300-fold in the frequency of transcription-dependent deletion events. pBR322 derivatives carrying the M13 replication origin and a 511 bp transcribed region under the control of the pTac promoter were used. Up to 12% of the plasmid population has sustained deletions within 4 h following the induction of pTac-directed transcription and M13 DNA replication, provided that the two proceed in opposite orientations. We observed that induction of transcription of the whole Escherichia coli lacZ gene (3244 bp) in the direction opposite to M13 replication leads to a fivefold decrease in plasmid copy number within 2 h, which is consistent with the proposal that deletions arise because replication fork progression is impeded. This decrease in parental plasmid copy number leads in turn to an enrichment in deleted plasmid forms. Our data confirm and extend the notion that simultaneous transcription and replication in opposite directions can efficiently promote deletion formation. In addition, this instability may be amplified when the rearranged molecules acquire a replicative advantage.

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