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Study of the influence of plasmids on the arbitrary primer polymerase chain reaction fingerprint of Escherichia coli strains
Author(s) -
Elaichouni Abdesslam,
Emmelo John,
Claeys Geert,
Verschraegen Gerda,
Verhelst Rita,
Vaneechoutte Mario
Publication year - 1994
Publication title -
fems microbiology letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.899
H-Index - 151
eISSN - 1574-6968
pISSN - 0378-1097
DOI - 10.1111/j.1574-6968.1994.tb06660.x
Subject(s) - plasmid , puc19 , plasmid preparation , biology , dna , microbiology and biotechnology , polymerase chain reaction , primer (cosmetics) , escherichia coli , genetics , gene , chemistry , pbr322 , organic chemistry
To study the effect of plasmids on the arbitrary primer‐polymerase chain reaction fingerprint of bacterial strains, the Escherichia coli strains DH5, Top10, and W3110 were transformed with plasmids of different sizes: respectively, pUC19, pCEP and two clinically important plasmids carrying resistance to several antibiotics. Total DNA, i.e. both chromosomal and plasmid DNA, was prepared from transformed cells by boiling the cell suspensions and by phenol‐chloroform extraction; chromosomal DNA was prepared by the same methods from the non‐transformed, plasmid‐free strains; plasmid DNA of pUC19 was purchased; plasmid DNA of pCEP was purified from the transformed strains by caesium chloride density gradient centrifugation. Arbitrarily primed polymerase chain reaction was carried out for all of these preparations. Amplification carried out independently with three different primers resulted in similar patterns for the chromosomal preparations whether or not plasmid was present. Amplification of plasmid DNA gave different patterns, characterized by fragments larger than those obtained when total or chromosomal DNA were used as the target. These data illustrate that the plasmids studied here do not influence the chromosomal arbitrarily primed PCR fingerprint, although plasmids alone are amplified in the absence of chromosomal DNA. Experiments comparing different relative concentrations of plasmid and chromosomal DNA indicate that under natural conditions the amount of chromosomal DNA per cell is sufficient to inhibit observable amplification of the plasmid(s) present.

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