J Bacteriol. 1993 February; 175(3): 583-588
Retrotransfer in Escherichia coli conjugation: bidirectional exchange or de novo mating?
J A Heinemann and
R G Ankenbauer
Laboratory of Microbial Structure and Function, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Rocky Mountain Laboratories, Hamilton, Montana 59840.
ABSTRACT
DNA can be transferred among eubacteria and to plants and fungi by related, plasmid-mediated processes collectively referred to as bacterial conjugation. Conjugation occurs between cells in contact with one another and results in the unidirectional delivery of DNA from a bacterial donor to a recipient. Recent experiments that have reexamined the directionality of DNA flow during conjugation have come to different conclusions, some suggesting that genetic material also flows from recipient cells into the donor and that this process, termed retrotransfer, is likewise directed by donor-encoded functions. Given that bacteria are perhaps united with all living creatures by conjugation, the possibility of gene flow into donor bacteria during conjugation raises interesting evolutionary and biocontainment issues. Here we report that plasmid transmission from bacterial recipients to donors is not a donor-mediated event. Movement of genetic material from recipients to donors was inhibited by streptomycin, which does not inhibit the conjugative donor, indicating that retrotransfer requires gene expression in recipients. Furthermore, retrotransfer was reduced in matings mediated by plasmids that encode strong entry exclusion, to a similar degree as matings between two donors. Therefore we suggest that retrotransfer is in fact newly initiated conjugation between transconjugants and donors.
J Bacteriol. 1993 February; 175(3): 583-588
This article has been cited by other articles:
-
Massoudieh, A., Mathew, A., Lambertini, E., Nelson, K. E., Ginn, T. R.
(2007). Horizontal Gene Transfer on Surfaces in Natural Porous Media: Conjugation and Kinetics. Vadose Zone J
6: 306-315
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Haines, A. S., Akhtar, P., Stephens, E. R., Jones, K., Thomas, C. M., Perkins, C. D., Williams, J. R., Day, M. J., Fry, J. C.
(2006). Plasmids from freshwater environments capable of IncQ retrotransfer are diverse and include pQKH54, a new IncP-1 subgroup archetype.. Microbiology
152: 2689-2701
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Bennett, P. M., Livesey, C. T., Nathwani, D., Reeves, D. S., Saunders, J. R., Wise, R.
(2004). An assessment of the risks associated with the use of antibiotic resistance genes in genetically modified plants: report of the Working Party of the British Society for Antimicrobial Chemotherapy. J Antimicrob Chemother
53: 418-431
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Ferguson, G. C., Heinemann, J. A., Kennedy, M. A.
(2002). Gene Transfer between Salmonella enterica Serovar Typhimurium inside Epithelial Cells. J. Bacteriol.
184: 2235-2242
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
HEINEMANN, J. A., ROUGHAN, P. D.
(2000). New Hypotheses on the Material Nature of Horizontally Mobile Genes. Ann. N. Y. Acad. Sci.
906: 169-186
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Szpirer, C., Top, E., Couturier, M., Mergeay, M.
(1999). Retrotransfer or gene capture: a feature of conjugative plasmids, with ecological and evolutionary significance. Microbiology
145: 3321-3329
[Full Text]
-
Chou, A. Y., Archdeacon, J., Kado, C. I.
(1998). Agrobacterium transcriptional regulator Ros is a prokaryotic zinc finger protein that regulates the plant oncogene ipt. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
95: 5293-5298
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
Copyright © 1993 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.