34 research outputs found
Genomic comparison of archaeal conjugative plasmids from Sulfolobus
All of the known self-transmissable plasmids of the Archaea have been
found in the genus Sulfolobus. To gain more insight
into archaeal conjugative processes, four newly isolated
self-transmissable plasmids, pKEF9, pHVE14, pARN3 and pARN4, were
sequenced and subjected to a comparative sequence analysis with two
earlier sequenced plasmids, pNOB8 and pING1. The analyses revealed
three conserved and functionally distinct sections in the genomes.
Section A is considered to encode the main components of the
conjugative apparatus, where two genes show low but significant
sequence similarity to sections of genes encoding bacterial
conjugative proteins. A putative origin of replication is located in
section B, which is highly conserved in sequence and contains several
perfect and imperfect direct and inverted repeats. Further downstream,
in section C, an operon encoding six to nine smaller proteins is
implicated in the initiation and regulation of replication. Each
plasmid carries an integrase gene of the type that does not partition
on integration, and there is strong evidence for their integration
into host chromosomes, where they may facilitate intercellular
exchange of chromosomal genes. Two plasmids contain hexameric short
regularly spaced repeats (SRSR), which have been implicated in plasmid
maintenance, and each plasmid carries multiple recombination motifs,
concentrated in the variable regions, which likely provide sites for
genomic rearrangements