Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology, University of Umeå, S-901 87 Umeå, Sweden
Abstract
Escherichia coli
K-12 ampicillin-resistant mutants hyperproducing chromosomal β-lactamase arose spontaneously from strains carrying
ampA1 ampC
+
. Such mutants were found even in a
recA
background. Two Amp
r
-100 strains were analyzed genetically. The Amp
r
-100 resistance level of both strains could be transduced by direct selection for ampicillin resistance. Several classes of ampicillin-resistant transductants were found that differed from one another in the β-lactamase activity and the ampicillin resistance mediated by an
ampA1 ampC
+
-carrying strain. The data suggested that β-lactamase hyperproduction was due to repetitions of the chromosomal
amp
genes. The size of the repeated region was calculated from cotransduction estimates, using the formula of Wu (Genetics
54:
405-410, 1966), and was found to be about 1 min in one strain and 1.5 min in the other. Second-step Amp
r
-400 mutants were isolated from an Amp
r
-100 strain. The resistance of these mutants was apparently also due to repetitions, each mediating a resistance to about 10 μg/ml. Mutants of wild-type strains that were moderately resistant to ampicillin also gave rise to intermediate-resistance classes, suggesting repetitions of the wild-type
amp
alleles. F′ factors hyperproducing chromosomal β-lactamase by gene repetitions were constructed. They mediated levels of ampicillin resistance comparable to that of naturally occurring resistance plasmids. The expression of β-lactamase hyperproduction was not affected by the presence of
ampA
and
ampC
alleles in
trans
and did not act in
trans
on the other alleles.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
95 articles.
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