Journal of Bacteriology, November 1998, p. 6023-6030, Vol. 180, No. 22
0021-9193/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.

Department of Biology and Center for Molecular Genetics, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093-0322,1 and Institut fuer Biotechnologie, Technische Universitaet Graz, A-8010 Graz, Austria2
Received 1 June 1998/Accepted 9 September 1998
The par region of the stably maintained
broad-host-range plasmid RK2 is organized as two divergent operons,
parCBA and parDE, and a cis-acting
site. parDE encodes a postsegregational killing system, and
parCBA encodes a resolvase (ParA), a nuclease (ParB), and a
protein of unknown function (ParC). The present study was undertaken to
further delineate the role of the parCBA region in the
stable maintenance of RK2 by first introducing precise deletions in the
three genes and then assessing the abilities of the different
constructs to stabilize RK2 in three strains of Escherichia
coli and two strains of Pseudomonas aeruginosa. The
intact parCBA operon was effective in stabilizing a
conjugation-defective RK2 derivative in E. coli MC1061K and
RR1 but was relatively ineffective in E. coli MV10
lac.
In the two strains in which the parCBA operon was
effective, deletions in parB, parC, or both
parB and parC caused an approximately twofold
reduction in the stabilizing ability of the operon, while a deletion in
the parA gene resulted in a much greater loss of
parCBA activity. For P. aeruginosa
PAO1161Rifr, the parCBA operon provided little
if any plasmid stability, but for P. aeruginosa
PAC452Rifr, the RK2 plasmid was stabilized to a substantial
extent by parCBA. With this latter strain, parA
and res alone were sufficient for stabilization. The
cer resolvase system of plasmid ColE1 and the loxP/Cre system of plasmid P1 were tested in comparison
with the parCBA operon. We found that, not unlike what was
previously observed with MC1061K, cer failed to stabilize
the RK2 plasmid with par deletions in strain MV10
lac,
but this multimer resolution system was effective in stabilizing the
plasmid in strain RR1. The loxP/Cre system, on the other
hand, was very effective in stabilizing the plasmid in all three
E. coli strains. These observations indicate that the
parA gene, along with its res site, exhibits a
significant level of plasmid stabilization in the absence of the
parC and parB genes but that in at least one
E. coli strain, all three genes are required for maximum
stabilization. It cannot be determined from these results whether or
not the stabilization effects seen with parCBA or the
cer and loxP/Cre systems are strictly due to a
reduction in the level of RK2 dimers and an increase in the number of
plasmid monomer units or if these systems play a role in a more complex
process of plasmid stabilization that requires as an essential step the
resolution of plasmid dimers.
Present address: Department of Molecular Microbiology, School of
Medicine, Washington University, St. Louis, MO 63110-1093.
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