Artículo
Analysis of RecA-independent recombination events between short direct repeats related to a genomic island and to a plasmid in Escherichia coli K12
Fecha
2017Registro en:
Azpiroz, M.F., Laviña, M. "Analysis of RecA-independent recombination events between short direct repeats related to a genomic island and to a plasmid in Escherichia coli K12". PeerJ [en línea]. 2017, (5) e3293. doi: 10.7717/peerj.3293
2167-8359
10.7717/peerj.3293
Autor
Azpiroz Hernández, María Fernanda
Laviña, Magela
Institución
Resumen
RecA-independent recombination events between short direct repeats, leading to
deletion of the intervening sequences, were found to occur in two genetic models
in the Escherichia coli K12 background. The first model was a small E. coli genomic
island which had been shown to be mobile in its strain of origin and, when cloned,
also in the E. coli K12 context. However, it did not encode a site-specific recombinase
as mobile genomic islands usually do. It was then deduced that the host cells should
provide the recombination function. This latter was searched for by means of a PCR
approach to detect the island excision in E. coli K12 mutants affected in a number
of recombination functions, including the 16 E. coli K12 site-specific recombinases,
the RecET system, and multiple proteins that participate in the RecA-dependent
pathways of homologous recombination. None of these appeared to be involved in
the island excision. The second model, analyzed in a RecA deficient context, was a
plasmid construction containing a short direct repeat proceeding from Saccharomyces
cerevisiae, which flanked the cat gene. The excision of this gene by recombination
of the DNA repeats was confirmed by PCR and through the detection, recovery and
characterization of the plasmid deleted form. In sum, we present new evidence on the
occurrence of RecA-independent recombination events in E. coli K12. Although the
mechanism underlying these processes is still unknown, their existence suggests that
RecA-independent recombination may confer mobility to other genetic elements, thus
contributing to genome plasticity.