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J Bacteriol. 1992 October; 174(19): 6011-6017

research-article

A conjugation procedure for Bdellovibrio bacteriovorus and its use to identify DNA sequences that enhance the plaque-forming ability of a spontaneous host-independent mutant.

T W Cotter and M F Thomashow

Department of Microbiology, Michigan State University, East Lansing 48824.

ABSTRACT

Wild-type bdellovibrios are obligate intraperiplasmic parasites of other gram-negative bacteria. However, spontaneous mutants that can be cultured in the absence of host cells occur at a frequency of 10(-6) to 10(-7). Such host-independent (H-I) mutants generally display diminished intraperiplasmic-growth capabilities and form plaques that are smaller and more turbid than those formed by wild-type strains on lawns of host cells. An analysis of the gene(s) responsible for the H-I phenotype should provide significant insight into the nature of Bdellovibrio host dependence. Toward this end, a conjugation procedure to transfer both IncQ and IncP vectors from Escherichia coli to Bdellovibrio bacteriovorus was developed. It was found that IncQ-type plasmids were capable of autonomous replication in B. bacteriovorus, while IncP derivatives were not. However, IncP plasmids could be maintained in B. bacteriovorus via homologous recombination through cloned B. bacteriovorus DNA sequences. It was also found that genomic libraries of wild-type B. bacteriovorus 109J DNA constructed in the IncP cosmid pVK100 were stably maintained in E. coli; those constructed in the IncQ cosmid pBM33 were unstable. Finally, we used the conjugation procedure and the B. bacteriovorus libraries to identify a 5.6-kb BamHI fragment of wild-type B. bacteriovorus DNA that significantly enhanced the plaque-forming ability of an H-I mutant, B. bacteriovorus BB5.


J Bacteriol. 1992 October; 174(19): 6011-6017




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