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Journal of Bacteriology, July 2004, p. 4134-4141, Vol. 186, No. 13
0021-9193/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.186.13.4134-4141.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Telomere Exchange between Linear Replicons of Borrelia burgdorferi
Wai Mun Huang,1 Margaret Robertson,2 John Aron,1 and Sherwood Casjens1*
Department of Pathology,1
HSC Core Facilities, University of Utah Medical School, Salt Lake City, Utah 841322
Received 5 January 2004/
Accepted 26 March 2004

ABSTRACT
Spirochetes in the genus
Borrelia carry a linear chromosome
and numerous linear plasmids that have covalently closed hairpin
telomeres. The overall organization of the large chromosome
of
Borrelia burgdorferi appears to have been quite stable over
recent evolutionary time; however, a large fraction of natural
isolates carry differing lengths of DNA that extend the right
end of the chromosome between about 7 and 20 kbp relative to
the shortest chromosomes. We present evidence here that a rather
recent nonhomologous recombination event in the
B. burgdorferi strain Sh-2-82 lineage has replaced its right chromosomal telomere
with a large portion of the linear plasmid lp21, which is present
in the strain B31 lineage. At least two successive rounds of
addition of linear plasmid genetic material to the chromosomal
right end appear to have occurred at the Sh-2-82 right telomere,
suggesting that this is an evolutionary mechanism by which plasmid
genetic material can become part of the chromosome. The unusual
nonhomologous nature of this rearrangement suggests that, barring
horizontal transfer, it can be used as a unique genetic marker
for this lineage of
B. burgdorferi chromosomes.

INTRODUCTION
The Lyme disease spirochetes,
Borrelia burgdorferi,
Borrelia afzelii, and
Borrelia garinii, and most likely all members of
the
Borrelia genus, have an unusual genome that is made up of
an approximately 900-kbp linear chromosome and numerous smaller
linear and circular extrachromosomal DNA elements. The nucleotide
sequence of the genome from one
B. burgdorferi isolate, B31
MI, has been determined (
8,
14). Analysis of this strain has
shown that the chromosome carries nearly all of its housekeeping
genes. Its 21 extrachromosomal elements include 12 linear plasmids
5 to 54 kbp in length and nine circular plasmids 9 to 32 kbp
in length that carry mostly genes of unknown function that are
unique to the genus
Borrelia (
8). Examination of numerous independent
natural
B. burgdorferi isolates has shown that sequences similar
to the plasmids in isolate B31 are usually found on plasmids
of similar size in other isolates (
1,
9,
10,
13,
15,
17-
19,
21,
23-
25,
27,
31,
32,
34), and a substantial fraction of these
plasmids appear to be present in all isolates examined to date
(
16,
23).
Physical maps of the chromosomes from 25 geographically diverse Borrelia isolates that either cause Lyme disease or are close relatives of ones that do have been constructed (5, 11, 22; R. van Vugt and S. Casjens, unpublished data). These maps are all extremely similar, indicating that the chromosomes carry little gross structural variation across the more than 10 species that make up this cluster of species. This lack of organizational variation in the chromosome is not universal in bacteria (3): for example, the genomes of several gram-negative and -positive bacteria have been found to vary up to tens of percentages in gene content and/or have substantial rearrangements among different isolates (12, 20, 33). On the other hand, there appear to have been numerous and substantial recent rearrangements in the linear plasmid portion of the B. burgdorferi B31 MI genome. Analysis of this genome sequence has shown that 10 of the 12 B31 linear plasmids carry a large amount of DNA that appears to be in a state of mutational decay and not to encode functional proteins. This most likely is a result of the numerous recent duplicative DNA rearrangements (8), since such duplications may release one of the copies from selection, allowing it to mutationally decay. This decay is now observed as a large number of "pseudogenes" that contain many translational frame-disrupting mutations.
Although the bulk of the chromosome appears to be very stable, we have previously noted that in B. burgdorferi sensu stricto the extreme right end of the chromosome (as defined by Fraser et al. [14]) is variable in length, in that additional sequences extend the right telomeric region in some isolates. BB0843 is the rightmost gene in the 903-kbp "constant portion" of the chromosome; it is only a few hundred base pairs from the right telomere in Borrelia isolates with the minimum-size chromosome, such as N40, R-IP3, WI91-23, and HB19 (7, 14). The sequenced chromosome of strain B31 MI has 7.2 kbp of DNA beyond BB0843 at its right telomere. This DNA is almost entirely made up of sequences that have paralogs on the B31 MI plasmids and, except for two apparently intact genes, appears to be largely in a state of severe mutational decay (8). Different B. burgdorferi isolates carry different lengths of DNA to the right of gene BB0843; in 31 B. burgdorferi isolates that we have examined, 21 carry such extensions (7). None have right-end extensions longer than the 19-kbp extension of Sh-2-82. In this study we examine the nature of the right-end chromosomal extension in B. burgdorferi isolate Sh-2-82.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Bacterial strains.
B. burgdorferi strain Sh-2-82 was isolated from an
Ixodes scapularis tick on Shelter Island, N.Y. (
26). Passage 6, passage 166, and
passage 320 cultures of strain Sh-2-82 were the kind gifts of
Tom Schwan, Patti Rosa, and Janis Weis, respectively. Strain
297 passage 5 was the kind gift of Justin Radolf. Strains JD1,
21305, 22921, 29968, 30757, and 28534 are described in the work
of Casjens et al. (
7); although we do not know exactly how each
source laboratory performed these passages, each one typically
represents six to nine generations.
B. burgdorferi strains were
propagated, and whole-cell DNA was prepared in agarose blocks
as previously described (
6). Contour-clamped homogeneous electric
field (CHEF) electrophoresis, DNA transfer to nylon membranes,
and Southern hybridizations were performed as previously described
(
6).
DNA manipulation and nucleotide sequence determination.
The nucleotide sequence of strain Sh-2-82 chromosomal right-end DNA was determined using a primer walking strategy and whole-genome DNA as template. Sequencing reactions with oligonucleotide primers 25 to 28 nucleotides long and Big Dye dideoxy terminator mix (PE Applied Biosystems, Foster City, Calif.) were performed in a thermal cycler as follows: 69 or 99 cycles at 95°C for 0.2 min, 1°C/s to 55°C, 55°C for 0.2 min, 1°C/s to 60°C, and 60°C for 4 min. Automated sequencers (PE Applied Biosystems) were used according to the manufacturer's recommendations. After nearly complete sequences of the two regions described in the text were determined, all ambiguities were resolved by sequencing PCR DNA fragments amplified from Sh-2-82 (passage 320) DNA. All of the sequence reported here was thus determined from both strands, except for the 63-bp repeat regions which could be approached only from one direction on whole-genomic DNA (see elsewhere).
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers.
These sequences have been deposited in GenBank with accession numbers AY309080 and AY309081 for the left and right unique regions, respectively.

RESULTS
Right chromosomal telomere of B. burgdorferi isolate Sh-2-82.
We found by Southern analysis that a DNA probe (probe 1; Table
1 and Fig.
1) from the left part of the 7.2-kbp B31 extension
hybridizes with the "extra" DNA at the right telomere of the
strain Sh-2-82 chromosome (data not shown), suggesting at least
some similarity between the right telomeric regions of these
two isolates. To characterize the long right telomeric extension
of the Sh-2-82 chromosome in more detail, a primer walking strategy
with whole-cell DNA as template was used to determine the nucleotide
sequence rightward from the conserved BB0843 gene (see Materials
and Methods). Several oligonucleotide sequences were chosen
from within the conserved strain B31 gene BB0843 that primed
a rightward sequencing reaction on Sh-2-82 template DNA. When
a good-quality sequence was obtained with one of them, a second
primer was chosen from within the sequence thus determined to
sequence further to the right and so on. In this way, nucleotide
sequence was determined for 4,173 bp of strain Sh-2-82 DNA rightward
from within gene BB0843. The left 2,692 bp of this sequence
are nearly identical to similarly located B31 sequence; Sh-2-82
has a 264-bp deletion (between bp 1879 and 1880) relative to
B31, but it is otherwise 99.6% identical to the parallel region
of the B31 chromosome (Fig.
1). This region in Sh-2-82 contains
an apparently intact gene BB0844 homolog that should encode
a protein of unknown function that is 99.4% identical to its
B31 ortholog. The right 1,481 bp of these 4,173 bp have no similarity
to the B31 chromosome, but the sequence is nearly identical
to B31 linear plasmid lp21 (similarity extends rightward from
bp 2438 on the published lp21 sequence [
8]). Between bp 2693
and 3870 the Sh-2-82 sequence is identical to that of the B31
lp21 plasmid. Immediately to the right of bp 3870 the sequence
contains about 5.5 tandem copies (there are many more repeats
beyond these copies; see below) of 63-bp direct repeats that
are very similar to the B31 lp21 63-bp repeat tract which lies
at an identical location there. This long repeat tract blocks
further rightward sequence determination by this strategy because
primers in this region would not have unique binding sites on
Sh-2-82 DNA.
Since the right portion of the above Sh-2-82 chromosomal sequence
is nearly identical to lp21, we attempted to determine whether
sequences similar to those on lp21 to the right of its 63-bp
repeat tract (the lp21 "right unique region" [Fig.
1]) were
also present near the Sh-2-82 right telomere. Opposing oligonucleotides
that amplify a 1.2-kbp section of the right unique region of
B31 lp21 plasmid (oligonucleotides A and B; Table
1; Fig.
1)
were used in a PCR and found to amplify identically sized fragments
from whole-cell B31 and Sh-2-82 template DNAs. This Sh-2-82
templated PCR product, called probe 2 (Table
1), was then used
in a Southern analysis of Sh-2-82 DNA to determine its location
in that strain's genome. It hybridized only with the 920-kbp
chromosome in whole Sh-2-82 DNA (Fig.
2) and only with the chromosome's
rightmost BssHII and SgrAI fragments (37 and 34 kbp, respectively;
data not shown, but see Fig.
4 below), showing that this amplicon
lies within 34 kbp of the chromosomal right end. Restriction
mapping of the rightmost chromosomal BglII, BsrGI, and NcoI
fragments with the same DNA probe (data not shown), in combination
with the sequences determined above and below, proved unequivocally
that probe 2 hybridizes with lp21-like sequences that are present
near the Sh-2-82 right telomere and distal to the 63-bp repeat
tract.
Oligonucleotides A and B were therefore used to prime a second
sequencing primer walk on whole-cell Sh-2-82 DNA. The resulting
sequence contig had 63-bp repeats at its left end (Fig.
1),
and as the walk neared the right telomere, the sequence quality
deteriorated, presumably due to competition between primer annealing
and snap-back of the telomeric hairpin (see below). A DNA probe
derived by PCR amplification near the right end of this sequence
contig (probe 3) also hybridized only with the rightmost Sh-2-82
chromosomal BssHII fragment in a Southern analysis (data not
shown). In order (i) to determine the location of the right
chromosomal telomere more precisely and (ii) to confirm that
the sequence determined was actually at this location, probe
3 was used in Southern analyses of singly and doubly restricted
whole-genome Sh-2-82 DNA to construct a restriction map of this
region of the chromosome that unambiguously located six restriction
enzyme cleavage sites (data not shown)two XbaI sites
and one EcoO109I, BstXI, HindIII, and EcoRI site each (Fig.
1). Each of these sites was correctly located in the primer
walk sequence, except the rightmost XbaI site, which is very
near the telomere and outside the primer walk region. Each of
the latter four enzymes' right-end restriction fragments extended
about 600 bp beyond the right end of the primer walk contig.
Rapid reannealing (snap-back) experiments analogous to those
done previously for DNA at the left end of the Sh-2-82 chromosome
(
7) showed that the two strands of the rightmost EcoO109I, BstXI,
EcoRI, and HindIII fragments rapidly anneal (data not shown).
We conclude that these fragments are in fact right-terminal
chromosomal fragments and that these fragments, like other linear
replicon terminal fragments in
Borrelia, are tipped by a covalently
closed DNA hairpin.
To determine the sequence of the tip of the Sh-2-82 right chromosomal telomere, we gel purified the size fraction 3.8 to 4.1 kbp of HindIII-restricted whole-cell Sh-2-82 DNA, which includes the rightmost HindIII fragment; nicked this DNA's terminal hairpin by S1 nuclease treatment; ligated the resulting DNA to a blunt-ended, double-stranded synthetic oligonucleotide; and used PCR to amplify between a primer that anneals within the primer walk sequence contig and a primer that anneals to the terminal, ligated synthetic sequence as previously described (7). The sequence of this PCR product was determined directly using both the amplification and internal primers, and in addition, the PCR product was cloned into the plasmid vector pCR4-TOPO (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, Calif.) and the sequences of the DNA inserts in several representative plasmids were determined. The resulting sequence overlapped the primer walk right unique region sequence in the manner expected and contains a correctly located telomere-proximal XbaI site (above) 220 bp from the right end; it extends the right unique sequence to the right by about 600 bp as predicted by the restriction map and contains at its extreme right terminus the 23-bp sequence 5'-TTTATACTAAAAAAAACTAATTT-3', which is similar to the sequences at the tips of other known Borrelia telomeres (7, 14, 15, 35). We also used this methodology to determine the previously unknown telomeric sequence at the right end of strain B31 MI linear plasmid lp21. The reported sequence of plasmid lp21 (GenBank accession no. AE001582 [8]) was found to be lacking the rightmost terminal 25 bp of the plasmid; this 25-bp sequence, 5'-GCTTTATACTAAAAAAAACTAATTT-3', is identical to the sequence that we determined for the right tip of the Sh-2-82 chromosome. One or a few nucleotides could be missing from the telomeres of these sequences due to possible removal by S1 nuclease. Merging of the right primer walk and the sequence of the terminal PCR amplicon resulted in 4,664 bp that contain the entire right unique region (Fig. 1). The leftmost 501 bp of this sequence contig is composed of approximately eight tandem copies of the same inexact 63-bp repeat present at the right end of the left unique region and is very similar to the parallel portion of lp21. The unique 4,163 bp to the right of bp 501 is 99.9% identical to the parallel region of lp21. In addition to three single nucleotide differences between Sh-2-82 and B31 in this region, there is an inversion of 5 bp (ACTTG centered on bp 2097). These 5 bp precisely separate a perfect 17-bp inverted repeat, which could have mediated the inversion. None of these differences disrupts the reading frame in which it occurs.
We also characterized in more detail the putative 63-bp repeat tract that lies between the two regions that were sequenced above. Southern analysis using a strain B31 probe from the 63-bp repeat region of lp21 (probe 4; Table 1 and Fig. 1) showed that the only Sh-2-82 sequences capable of hybridizing with this probe lie on the chromosome and within the 37-kbp rightmost BssHII chromosomal restriction fragment (Fig. 3). Restriction enzymes MseI (cuts at TTAA) and AseI (ATTAAT) cut the 72% A+T Borrelia DNA extremely frequently, the former giving rise to fragments that are nearly all less than 500 bp in length. There are no MseI or AseI sites in the B31 lp21 repeat tract, so in B31 they give rise to unusually large 63-bp-repeat-containing 11 ± 1.0-kbp and 13 ± 1.0-kbp DNA fragments, respectively (8). The Sh-2-82 passage 320 and B31 MI repeat tract-containing MseI and AseI fragments were indistinguishable in size (data not shown), suggesting that these enzymes also do not cut the Sh-2-82 repeat tract and that the tract length is about the same in B31 linear plasmid lp21 and the Sh-2-82 chromosome. The sequence determinations of the right and left unique regions combined with the length of the 63-bp repeat tract thus show that there is about 19 kbp of extra sequence at the Sh-2-82 right chromosomal telomere, which agrees well with our previous estimate from the length of right terminal restriction fragment sizes (7).
The experiments described above show that DNA probes derived
from the right unique region, the 63-bp repeat tract of B31
lp21, and the Sh-2-82 right unique region all hybridize exclusively
to the 37-kbp rightmost chromosomal BssHII fragment. Figures
2 and
3 show that this chromosomal hybridization is present
at passages 7, 166, and 320 in culture (there are three to five
generations per passage), although there is also an approximately
2-kbp-shorter form present (as the majority) in passage 7; it
is not present by passage 166. Thus, although a number of linear
plasmids have been lost with passage in culture (reference
26 and our unpublished analysis), we have no evidence of any substantial
changes in the Sh-2-82 right telomeric region during this period;
in particular we note that the length of the 11-kbp form of
the chromosomal 63-bp repeat tract appears not to have changed
significantly in about 1,500 generations (313 passages). The
13 63-bp repeats in the sequence reported here are all represented
exactly among the 34 types of slightly different repeats present
in B31 lp21, but the repeat types are not present in the same
order, suggesting that gene conversion may have been active
in this region since the two sequences diverged.
Other B. burgdorferi isolates with right telomeric chromosomal extensions.
We previously reported that several other B. burgdorferi isolates, 21305, 22921, 29968, and JD1, have approximately 19-kbp right-end chromosomal telomeric extensions (all quite similar in length to Sh-2-82) and 28534 has an approximately 16-kbp extension (7). In addition, strain 297 (28) has a right-end chromosomal extension similar in length to that of Sh-2-82 (J. Aron and S. Casjens, unpublished data). Each of these right-end extensions was found to hybridize to our probe 1 (Table 1). In order to determine whether the extensions in these strains might also contain lp21-like sequences, a Southern analysis was performed using probe 5 (Table 1) from the right unique region of B31 linear plasmid lp21 (this probe is 99.9% identical to, and hybridizes equally well with, the homologous Sh-2-82 right unique region). Figure 4 shows that 28534 and 29968 chromosomes do carry probe 5 sequences near their right telomeres, since the probe hybridizes to the right-end BssHII fragments in these strains (it also hybridizes to this fragment from strain 297; data not shown). MseI and AseI cleavage experiments (as in Fig. 3) estimated the length of the 63-bp repeat tract to be 9 kbp in 28534 and 11 kbp in 29968 (data not shown). Both of these strains also carry 24- to 25-kbp linear plasmids that hybridize (but not as strongly) with this probe (Table 2). Circular DNAs are not resolved into tight bands by the CHEF electrode pulse program used, so the bands observed almost certainly represent linear DNAs. Passage 7 and 166 Sh-2-82 also carry apparently linear plasmids that react very weakly to this probe but which are lost by passage 320 (Table 2). The apparent change in size of these plasmids with passage is difficult to assess since (i) less total DNA was present in the passage 7 lanes; (ii) only a subset of the cells might carry the larger hybridizing plasmids at passage 7, which could have expanded by passage 166; or (iii) there may have been DNA rearrangements among plasmids during growth in culture.
Probe 5 does not react well with the chromosome in strains JD1,
21305, and 22921 and hybridizes much better with 23- to 27-kbp
linear plasmids in these strains (Fig.
4). These strains also
carry 63-bp repeat tracts on similar-size plasmids based on
parallel Southern analyses with probe 4, and they carry 9-kbp,
9- and 13-kbp, and 9- and 11-kbp reactive MseI fragments, respectively
(data not shown). In a panel of 13 additional isolates with
shorter or no right-end extensions, only isolate 30757 (7-kbp
right extension) was found to carry the 63-bp-repeat-hybridizing
sequences, and these were on an approximately 24-kbp linear
plasmid (
23).
To test whether the 297, 28534, and 29968 chromosomal right-end extensions are the result of a recombination event that was identical to that of Sh-2-82, we PCR amplified (using oligonucleotides E and F, Table 1) and sequenced a 1,024-bp region that includes the Sh-2-82 recombination event from each strain (from 2515 through 3538 on the Sh-2-82 right unique region sequence). In all three cases the sequence of the amplified product was identical to the parallel Sh-2-82 sequence. Thus, since their recombination joints are identical, the right telomere replacement by lp21 in these three strains almost certainly happened only once in a common ancestor. It is interesting that Stevenson and Miller (30) recently found that Sh-2-82 and 297 also share extensive sequence identity on their cp26 and cp32 circular plasmids, supporting the notion that these are very closely related isolates. Isolates Sh-2-82, 28534, and 29968 are from ticks captured in New York, Maryland, and Connecticut, respectively, and 297 is a human isolate from Connecticut, indicating that geographic movement of the affected chromosome can happen before random mutagenic changes occur in what is thought to be nonfunctional DNA (e.g., in the gene BBU04 pseudogene homologous region). Thus, four of the seven known B. burgdorferi isolates with >15-kbp right-end extensions carry the same extensive homology to B31 linear plasmid lp21 at the right end of their chromosomes. Strains Sh-2-82, 297, 28534, and 29968 have lp21-like extensions at their right chromosomal telomeres, with the 63-bp repeat tract of 28534 being 2 kbp shorter than those of Sh-2-82 and 29968 (strain 297 was not tested). Since they carry probe 1- but not probe 4- or 5-hybridizing DNA near their right chromosomal telomeres, strains JD1, 21305, and 22921 appear to have some other DNA replacing and extending the tip of an ancestral B31-like chromosome; it seems likely that this DNA will be derived from some other Borrelia linear plasmid.

DISCUSSION
The structure of the right end of the Sh-2-82 chromosome is
most easily explained by a simple, single recombination event
between the right telomeric region of a B31-like chromosome
and a B31 lp21-like linear plasmid, so that the rightmost 16
kbp of the plasmid replaced the distal 4 kbp of that chromosome
(Fig.
1). In the Sh-2-82 chromosome right-end extension the
proximal 2,692 bp are 99.6% identical to the B31 chromosome,
and the distal lp21-like region unique (non-63-bp repeat) sequence
is 99.9% identical to linear plasmid lp21. These extremely high
similarities allow deduction of the nature of the recombination
event in the Sh-2-82 progenitor. Figure
5 shows that there is
an abrupt switch in Sh-2-82 from similarity to the B31 chromosome
to similarity to the B31 lp21 linear plasmid. There are only
2 bp of sequence identity at the point where this recombination
must have taken place, making this an essentially nonhomologous
event. There are three additional locations in
B. burgdorferi linear replicon sequences in which a similar deduction can be
made regarding past rearrangements: (i) the 265-bp deletion
in the non-lp21-like Sh-2-82 rightward extension compared to
the homologous B31 sequence (Fig.
1 and
5); (ii) linear plasmid
lp56 in B31, which appears to have been generated by the integration
of a 31-kbp circle (homologous to the cp32 plasmids) into an
approximately 24-kbp linear plasmid (
8); and (iii) a 900-bp
inversion near the left end of B31 lp56 relative to paralogous
sequences on B31 plasmids lp28-4 and lp36 (
8). In these cases
there are 0, 2, and 2 bp of identity (the latter occurred within
a 20-bp region of complex imperfect similarity), respectively,
at the points where the recombination events must have occurred.
In addition, two apparent deletions of circular cp32 plasmids
have been reported: an approximately 14-kbp deletion to form
cp18 in strain N40, where the putative crossover took place
at one side of a 6-of-8-bp match in its closest relative, plasmid
cp32-1 (
29), and an approximately 10-kbp deletion to form cp18-2
in strain 297, whose crossover point has no base pairs of identity
in the two possible parental sequences in plasmid cp32-7 (
2).
Nonhomologous rearrangements appear to have occurred relatively
frequently on these DNAs. However, given the huge number of
possible events, it is unlikely that identical nonhomologous
recombination events of independent origin will be found, so
these unique rearrangements (e.g., the chromosome-lp21 novel
joint described here in Sh-2-82, 297, 28534, and 29968) should
be useful as genetic markers in the characterization of
B. burgdorferi populations.
The telomeric sequences at the extreme right ends of the Sh-2-82
chromosome and the B31 lp21 plasmid are identical, but they
have interesting differences from the previously characterized
Borrelia termini. All previously known
Borrelia telomeres have
an absolutely conserved TAGTAYANA sequence (5' to 3' in the
upper strand when the telomere is on the left; Fig.
6) that
is 14 bp from the end and a highly conserved TATAAT sequence
that is either 1 or 4 bp from the terminus (
4). The Sh-2-82
and lp21 right-end terminal sequences determined here have a
TAGTAYANA sequence that is 14 bp from the apparent end; however,
they have no convincing TATAAT sequence. Compared to the other
telomere sequences, AATTAG or TAGTTT occupies the type 1 or
type 2 "TATAAT positions," respectively, and these telomeres
do not fit either type (Fig.
6). Tourand et al. (
32a) have used
mutant target sites to show that the sequence in at least parts
of the TATAAT and TAGTA regions of a type 1 telomere is indeed
important for telomere formation by protelomerase in vitro.
However, the observations made here point out that the target
specificity of the
Borrelia telomere resolution machinery is
not yet fully understood, especially in the "TATAAT portion"
of the target sequence, and future new telomere sequences can
be expected to shed additional light on terminal sequence constraints
and protelomerase recognition.
The data presented here make a particularly clear case for a
past recombinational exchange event between a
Borrelia linear
plasmid and a chromosomal telomere. This, coupled with the finding
that the distal, non-Sh-2-82-like portion of the B31 right-end
extension is also plasmid related (
8) and with the Southern
analyses of other strains presented here, suggests that all
the observed length variation at the
B. burgdorferi chromosomal
right end may be due to recombination with linear plasmids.
Variations in length at the left end of the
Borrelia japonica chromosome (
5), coupled with the presence of plasmid-hybridizing
sequences there (M. Murphy and S. Casjens, unpublished data),
suggest that similar telomeric replacements by linear plasmid
DNAs have occurred there as well. It is not known why or how
such replacements occur, nor is it known why the phenomenon
seems to be restricted to the right end of the
B. burgdorferi chromosome and the left end of the
B. japonica chromosome among
the various
Borrelia species examined to date.
The directionality of the postulated right-end telomere exchange event is most likely the replacement of the chromosomal telomere by the lp21 sequences (as opposed to generation of lp21 by "excision" from the end of an Sh-2-82-like parental chromosome), since the recombination event truncated an apparently intact lp21 gene, BBU04, which has paralogs on several other plasmids; it is very unlikely that the intact lp21 gene BBU04 would have been generated by a nonhomologous excision event. Our previous studies suggested that the rightmost 7.2 kbp of the linear chromosome of strain B31 are all derived from plasmids in a similar but more complex manner, so that the Sh-2-82 right end is the result of at least two successive rounds of telomere replacement. B. burgdorferi isolates B31 and Sh-2-82 were both isolated from I. scapularis ticks on Shelter Island, N.Y., but they do not appear to be especially closely related, since the constant portions of their chromosomes have several restriction site polymorphisms among the relatively small number of such sites examined (5); we do note, however, that these two isolates carry an apparently identical cp32 plasmid (30). The lp21 recombination event in the Sh-2-82 chromosome must have been rather recent, since its sequences remain more than 99% identical to the B31 lp21 sequences.
The B31 right-end extension contains two apparently intact genes, BB0844 and BB0852, both of which have paralogs on the B31 linear plasmids. These are surrounded by at least nine severely damaged plasmid-like genes (8), as if plasmid sequences had been joined to the right end of the chromosome, after which most of the plasmid genes were allowed to decay but the two currently intact genes were perhaps selected to remain functional. According to this model, the B31 chromosome had sequences added some time ago and mutational decay processes have partially removed those genes that are of no use there, while the lp21 addition to the Sh-2-82 chromosome (in which three possibly functional genes and six apparent pseudogenes of linear plasmid lp21 replaced one possibly functional gene and several pseudogenes of a B31-like chromosome) happened only rather recently, and further decay has barely begun on the newly added region. This appears to be an evolutionary mechanism which is able to sequentially move genetic material from linear plasmids onto the end of the linear Borrelia chromosome.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank Tom Schwan, Patti Rosa, Janis Weis, Justin Radolf,
and Tom Anderson for
Borrelia strains.
This work was supported by NIH grant AI49003 to S.C.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Pathology, University of Utah Medical School, 50 North 1900 East, Salt Lake City, UT 84132-2501. Phone: (801) 581-5980. Fax: (801) 581-3607. E-mail:
sherwood.casjens{at}path.utah.edu.


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Journal of Bacteriology, July 2004, p. 4134-4141, Vol. 186, No. 13
0021-9193/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.186.13.4134-4141.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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