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J Bacteriol. 1967 September; 94(3): 719-733
Copyright © 1967 American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Genetic Studies of Sulfadiazine-resistant and Methionine-requiring Neisseria Isolated From Clinical Material

B. Wesley Catlin

Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Marquette University School of Medicine, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53233

ABSTRACT

Deoxyribonucleate (DNA) preparations were extracted from Neisseria meningitidis (four isolates from spinal fluid and blood) and N. gonorrhoeae strains, all of which were resistant to sulfadiazine upon primary isolation. These DNA preparations, together with others from in vitro mutants of N. meningitidis and N. perflava, were examined in transformation tests by using as recipient a drug-susceptible strain of N. meningitidis (Ne 15 Sul-s Met+) which was able to grow in a methionine-free defined medium. The sulfadiazine resistance typical of each donor was introduced into the uniform constitution of this recipient. Production of p-aminobenzoic acid was not significantly altered thereby. Transformants elicited by DNA from the N. meningitidis clinical isolates were resistant to at least 200 µg of sulfadiazine/ml, and did not show a requirement for methionine (Sul-r Met+). DNA from six strains of N. gonorrhoeae, which were isolated during the period of therapeutic use of sulfonamides, conveyed lower degrees of resistance and, invariably, a concurrent methionine requirement (Sul-r/Met). The requirement of these transformants, and that of in vitro mutants selected on sulfadiazine-agar, was satisfied by methionine, but not by vitamin B12, homocysteine, cystathionine, homoserine, or cysteine. Sul-r Met+ and Sul-r/Met loci could coexist in the same genome, but were segregated during transformation. On the other hand, the dual Sul-r/Met properties were not separated by recombination, but were eliminated together. DNA from various Sul-r/Met clones tested against recipients having nonidentical Sul-r/Met mutant sites yielded Sul-s Met+ transformants. The met locus involved is genetically complex, and will be a valuable tool for studies of genetic fine structure of members of Neisseria, and of genetic homology between species.


J Bacteriol. 1967 September; 94(3): 719-733
Copyright © 1967 American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.







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