Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Recombination between insertion sequence copies can cause genetic deletion, inversion, or duplication. However, it is difficult to assess the fraction of all genomic rearrangements that involve insertion sequences. In previous gene duplication and amplification studies of
Acinetobacter baylyi
ADP1, an insertion sequence was evident in approximately 2% of the characterized duplication sites. Gene amplification occurs frequently in all organisms and has a significant impact on evolution, adaptation, drug resistance, cancer, and various disorders. To understand the molecular details of this important process, a previously developed system was used to analyze gene amplification in selected mutants. The current study focused on amplification events in two chromosomal regions that are near one of six copies of the only transposable element in ADP1, IS
1236
(an IS
3
family member). Twenty-one independent mutants were analyzed, and in contrast to previous studies of a different chromosomal region, IS
1236
was involved in 86% of these events. IS
1236
-mediated amplification could occur through homologous recombination between insertion sequences on both sides of a duplicated region. However, this mechanism presupposes that transposition generates an appropriately positioned additional copy of IS
1236
. To evaluate this possibility, PCR and Southern hybridization were used to determine the chromosomal configurations of amplification mutants involving IS
1236
. Surprisingly, the genomic patterns were inconsistent with the hypothesis that intramolecular homologous recombination occurred between insertion sequences following an initial transposition event. These results raise a novel possibility that the gene amplification events near the IS
1236
elements arise from illegitimate recombination involving transposase-mediated DNA cleavage.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
15 articles.
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