Affiliation:
1. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, Alabama 35294
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The region upstream of the
Escherichia coli bgl
operon is an insertion hot spot for several transposons. Elements as distantly related as Tn
1
, Tn
5
, and phage Mu home in on this location. To see what characteristics result in a high-affinity site for transposition, we compared in vivo and in vitro Mu transposition patterns near the
bgl
promoter. In vivo, Mu insertions were focused in two narrow zones of DNA near
bgl
, and both zones exhibited a striking orientation bias. Five hot spots upstream of the
bgl
cyclic AMP binding protein (CAP) binding site had Mu insertions exclusively with the phage oriented left to right relative to the direction of
bgl
transcription. One hot spot within the CAP binding domain had the opposite (right-to-left) orientation of phage insertion. The DNA segment lying between these two Mu hot-spot clusters is extremely A/T rich (80%) and is an efficient target for insertion sequences during stationary phase. IS
1
insertions that activate the
bgl
operon resulted in a decrease in Mu insertions near the CAP binding site. Mu transposition in vitro differed significantly from the in vivo transposition pattern, having a new hot-spot cluster at the border of the A/T-rich segment. Transposon hot-spot behavior and orientation bias may relate to an asymmetry of transposon DNA-protein complexes and to interactions with proteins that produce transcriptionally silenced chromatin.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
24 articles.
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