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Journal of Bacteriology, May 2002, p. 2841-2844, Vol. 184, No. 10
0021-9193/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.184.10.2841-2844.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Linear Plasmid in the Genome of Clavibacter michiganensis subsp. sepedonicus
Susan E. Brown, Dennis L. Knudson, and Carol A. Ishimaru*
Department of Bioagricultural Sciences and Pest Management, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado 80523-1177
Received 1 November 2001/
Accepted 20 February 2002

ABSTRACT
Contour-clamped homogeneous electric field gel analysis of genomic
DNA of the plant pathogen
Clavibacter michiganensis subsp.
sepedonicus revealed the presence of a previously unreported extrachromosomal
element. This new element was demonstrated to be a linear plasmid.
Of 11 strains evaluated, all contained either a 90-kb (pCSL1)
or a 140-kb (pCSL2) linear plasmid.

TEXT
The genus
Clavibacter is comprised of plant-pathogenic bacteria
impacting the health of several economically important monocots
and dicots (
5,
8). It is a member of the gram-positive and high-G+C
family
Microbacteriaceae. When first constructed,
Clavibacter contained several species; however, recent evidence supports
reclassification of all of the species, except
Clavibacter michiganensis,
into new genera (
9,
18,
24,
29). Very little is known of the
molecular biology of
C. michiganensis and its subspecies, which
are differentiated on the basis of plant host specificity (
14,
20). Our studies have focused on
Clavibacter michiganensis subsp.
sepedonicus, the cause of bacterial ring rot of potato, because
of its status as an international quarantine organism (
12,
27).
We have applied protocols for the analysis of high-molecular-weight
DNA to reveal basic information about genome size and organization
in
C. michiganensis subsp.
sepedonicus and its genomic relationship
to other members of the
Actinomycetales. The basic characteristics
of the strains of
C. michiganensis subsp.
sepedonicus used in
this study are given in Table
1.
In our previous studies using contour-clamped homogeneous electric
field (CHEF) gel analysis of high-molecular-weight DNA, the
minimal genome size of
C. michiganensis subsp.
sepedonicus was
estimated to be 2.5 to 2.6 Mb (
4). High genetic similarity values
(>88%) were obtained by hierarchical analysis of
HindIII
and
EcoRI genomic fingerprints (
4). These findings were consistent
with previous claims that
C. michiganensis subsp.
sepedonicus is a homogeneous taxon (
5,
8,
18,
23). Differences between the
genomic fingerprints of virulent and avirulent stains of
C. michiganensis subsp.
sepedonicus were also detected (
4). Here
we present evidence that the genome of
C. michiganensis subsp.
sepedonicus contains a previously unreported extrachromosomal
element and that this element is a linear plasmid.
By using protocols described for genomic fingerprinting of digested high-molecular-weight DNA, two bands were consistently detected in the undigested genomic DNA of all strains of C. michiganensis subsp. sepedonicus (Fig. 1) (4). One was a faint band that corresponded to unresolved genomic DNA. The other was a bright band that did not correspond in size to any element reported previously for C. michiganensis subsp. sepedonicus. The genome of most strains of C. michiganensis subsp. sepedonicus contains a single 50-kb circular plasmid, designated pCS1 (6, 11, 21). The bright band present in CHEF gels of undigested DNA was much larger than 50 kb. In 10 of the 11 strains, the size of the bright band was about 90 kb, while the size of a similarly intense band in the remaining strain was about 140 kb (Fig. 1). Even undigested DNA from strains P45 and BCP45, which reportedly lack pCS1 and were not amplified by pCS1-specific PCR primers, contained a 90-kb band (4, 21, 26).
Restriction enzymes known to digest pCS1 into a particular number
of fragments were evaluated to determine if the bright 90- and
140-kb bands were perhaps forms of pCS1. Closed circular supercoiled
plasmids migrate slowly in pulsed-field gels, while open circular
forms typically remain trapped in the sample well (
2,
3,
19).
Linear plasmids, in contrast, migrate in a pulse-time-dependent
manner and at a rate that allows accurate size estimation. If,
for example, the 90 kb was due to a circular form of pCS1, digestion
with
XbaI would be expected to produce a 50-kb linear fragment,
since pCS1 contains a single
XbaI site (
21). Genomic DNA prepared
in agarose blocks of selected strains was digested with the
restriction enzyme
XbaI and separated alongside an undigested
sample by using previously described CHEF conditions (
4). In
all cases, the bright bands did not shift in size after
XbaI
digestion (data not shown).
BamHI and ClaI were evaluated also, because these cut pCS1 into known restriction patterns (21). Undigested genomic DNA was separated by CHEF, and slices containing the 90- and 140-kb bands were removed from the gel. The DNA was digested with restriction enzymes while still in the gel slices (4). The gel slice was either loaded directly into the well of a new gel or digested under standard conditions for gelase (Epicentre Technologies), and the fragments were precipitated from the mixture. Precipitation of DNA in gel slices produced poor quality and low yields of DNA. The best preparations were obtained by loading the treated plugs or slices directly into the wells of fresh gels followed by separation under CHEF conditions. ClaI, an AT-rich recognition site enzyme, cuts pCS1 at only a few locations (21). In contrast, ClaI digestion of the bright bands from CIC31, ATCC 33113, and P45 produced multiple (>10) bands of greater size than those reported for pCS1 (data not shown). Similar results were obtained with BamHI, a GC-rich recognition site enzyme; several fragments not reported for pCS1 were detected after BamHI digestion of 90- and 140-kb bands (data not shown).
The bright band in CHEF profiles of undigested genomic DNA of C. michiganensis subsp. sepedonicus could not be attributed to pCS1, because strains reported previously to lack pCS1 contained the 90-kb band, and digestion with BamHI, ClaI, and XbaI did not produce fragments of the predicted sizes. Furthermore, digestion of genomic DNA with S1 nuclease, which can be used to linearize circular plasmids for sizing by CHEF electrophoresis, failed to change the size of the 90- or 140-kb bands (1). A faint 50-kb band corresponding to pCS1 was apparent, however, after S1 nuclease treatment of genomic DNA from ATCC 33113 (data not shown). In addition, pCS1 reportedly does not contain any HindIII or EcoRI sites (21), yet the 90- and 140-kb bands were absent or were of reduced intensity in genomic fingerprints obtained with either HindIII or EcoRI (Fig. 2) (4).
The intensity and reproducibility in size of the 90- and 140-kb
bands in repeated CHEF gels would be predicted if the bands
were from linear plasmids (
2,
15). The plasmid is present at
about five copies per cell, as estimated from measurements of
the amount of DNA represented by the plasmid in relation to
the total amount of DNA present in the corresponding agarose
plug. Assuming the plasmids are linear, the sums of the sizes
of all fragments obtained by restriction digests should add
up to the same sizes as the unrestricted bands. Digestion of
the 90- and 140-kb bands with
SpeI gave fragments suitable for
sizing, and the sum of the
SpeI fragments agreed with the size
of the undigested bands (Table
2). The sum of fragments obtained
with
BclI was about 20 kb less than the size of the undigested
plasmid, presumably due to the presence of multiple overlapping
fragments not resolved by the CHEF conditions (Table
2).
BclI
digests revealed differences between the 90-kb linear plasmids
from different strains. The
BclI restriction pattern of the
plasmid from the virulent strain ATCC 33113, in particular,
was not the same as those obtained from the avirulent strains
P45 and BCP45, even though these plasmids have identical
SpeI
patterns (Fig.
3). The
BclI and
SpeI patterns of the putative
linear plasmids were clearly different from those reported for
pCS1 (
21).
The 90- and 140-kb plasmids were apparently related in that
they contained some of the same-size
SpeI or
BclI fragments
(Table
2 and Fig.
3), and homology between the plasmids was
detectable by Southern hybridization (Fig.
4). The 90-kb band
from undigested genomic DNA of ATCC 33113 was purified from
CHEF gels, labeled, and detected with the DIG (digoxigenin)
Chem-Link labeling and detection set from Roche Molecular Biochemicals.
Strong hybridization signals corresponding to the 90- and 140-kb
bands were seen in the undigested DNA (Fig.
4). No hybridization
signals to unresolved genomic DNA migrating at the compression
zone were detected (Fig.
4). If the bands at 90 and 140 kb were
actually linear forms of circular plasmids, then the circular
forms should have been detected elsewhere in the gel. The lack
of any hybridization signals other than those corresponding
to the 90- and 140-kb bands was again evidence that these bands
represented linear plasmids.
We conclude that the genome of
C. michiganensis subsp.
sepedonicus contains an extrachromosomal element in addition to pCS1 and
that this element is a linear plasmid. The linear plasmid is
designated pCSL to distinguish it from the circular plasmid
pCS1. We propose the terms pCSL1 and pCSL2 for the 90- and 140-kb
plasmids, respectively. These are the first linear plasmids
to be described for the genus
Clavibacter. It is not surprising
that pCSL has not been detected in previous studies characterizing
plasmids from
C. michiganensis subsp.
sepedonicus. Most of those
studies used plasmid purification protocols that would greatly
reduce or eliminate the presence of linear molecules (
11,
16,
21). The lack of a band corresponding to pCS1 in CHEF gels of
undigested genomic DNA is also not surprising, because of the
inherent limitations associated with pulsed-field gel electrophoresis
of large circular molecules (
2,
3,
19).
The role of linear plasmids in the biology and evolution of Clavibacter remains to be determined. Linear plasmids, which occur frequently in Actinomycetales, are receiving considerable attention because of their importance in virulence, promotion of genetic variability, and production of antibiotics (7, 17, 25, 28). Complete genome sequencing of C. michiganensis subsp. sepedonicus is currently under way. Once obtained, the complete sequence is expected to reveal putative functions associated with the linear plasmids from C. michiganensis subsp. sepedonicus and to enable direct sequence comparisons between pCSL1 and pCS1 and other linear actinomycete plasmids.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank S. De Boer, M. Metzler, C. Orser, and A. Oleson for
kindly providing strains. We acknowledge the technical assistance
of A. Reilley.
We also acknowledge grant support provided by the Colorado Agricultural Experiment Station, USDA Special Research Grants, and the Colorado Potato Administrative Committee.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Bioagricultural Sciences and Pest Management, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523-1177.


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Journal of Bacteriology, May 2002, p. 2841-2844, Vol. 184, No. 10
0021-9193/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.184.10.2841-2844.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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