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IS 911 ‐mediated intramolecular transposition is naturally temperature sensitive
Author(s) -
Haren Laurence,
Bétermier Mireille,
Polard Patrice,
Chandler Michael
Publication year - 1997
Publication title -
molecular microbiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.857
H-Index - 247
eISSN - 1365-2958
pISSN - 0950-382X
DOI - 10.1046/j.1365-2958.1997.4951854.x
Subject(s) - transposase , transposable element , transposition (logic) , biology , mutant , cleavage (geology) , in vivo , intramolecular force , biophysics , insertion sequence , microbiology and biotechnology , stereochemistry , genetics , gene , chemistry , paleontology , linguistics , philosophy , fracture (geology)
It is shown here that the bacterial insertion sequence IS 911 exhibits a temperature‐sensitive transposition phenotype. Previous results have demonstrated that elevated levels of the IS 911 transposase OrfAB generate significant quantities of a figure‐eight form, created by cleavage and circularization of one of the transposon strands, and of an excised circular form, in which both transposon strands have been circularized. We show here that the level of both types of molecule observed in vivo was greatly reduced at 42°C compared with 37°C. On the other hand, reducing the temperature to 30°C resulted in a significant increase in production. Transposition activity at this temperature was sufficiently high to permit detection in vivo of an excised circular form of a defective single IS 911 chromosomal copy when OrfAB is supplied in trans . A similar temperature–activity profile is observed for a cell‐free reaction that uses partially purified OrfAB and generates the figure‐eight form uniquely. Moreover, two point mutants of OrfAB were obtained, which render the reactions partially temperature resistant both in vivo and in vitro . These results suggest that some property of transposase itself is sensitive to elevated temperatures.

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