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Characteristics of R931 and Other Pseudomonas aeruginosa R Factors

TLDR
R factor R931 exists as a naturally occurring high-frequency transfer system in P. aeruginosa strains 931 and 1310, however, in strain 280 it acts as if subject to fertility repression, and other members of the P-2 compatibility group also are high- frequencies transfer systems in the natural host and in strain 1310.
Abstract
R factors were detected in 3.3% of 233 hospital isolates of Pseudomonas aeruginosa using P. aeruginosa recipients in conjugations. Transferred markers included streptomycin, tetracycline, and sulfonamide resistance. Gentamicin resistance was transferred from two strains previously shown to acetylate gentamicin. A group of R factors exemplified by R931 were characterized by failure to transfer to Escherichia coli recipients. Such R factors formed a single compatibility group when examined in a P. aeruginosa recipient. Other P. aeruginosa R factors, including RP4, showed stable coexistence with the R931 group. It is proposed that RP4 and similar R factors be members of the P-1 compatibility group and that R931, R3108, R209, and R130 be members of a group termed P-2. The buoyant densities of all R factors examined were similar, about 1.716 to 1.719 g/cm 3 . The content of R-factor deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) relative to the total DNA varied among the different R factors, ranging from about 18 ± 2% in log-phase cells of 931 (R931) to undetectable for 679 (R679). However, R679, which transferred from strain 679 at extremely low and irregular frequencies to an E. coli host, was shown to represent about 4% R-factor DNA in that host. The relative DNA content of R931 appeared to decline in the stationary growth phase of 931 (R931) or 280 (R931). R931 covalently closed circular DNA was isolated by ethidium bromide-CsCl gradient centrifugation and examined by electron microscopy. Two major molecular distributions existed, having contour lengths of 0.5 and 12.4 μm. The molecular weights were estimated to be 10 6 and 25 × 10 6 . Both molecules were under relaxed replication control. R factor R931 exists as a naturally occurring high-frequency transfer system in P. aeruginosa strains 931 and 1310. However, in strain 280 it acts as if subject to fertility repression. Other members of the P-2 compatibility group also are high-frequency transfer systems in the natural host and in strain 1310. RP4 is restricted from recipient strain 1310. Some additional recipient effects were noted in that strains 1310 or 280 sometimes differed in recipient effectiveness with a given donor. Agglutination reactions with absorbed antiserum were able to distinguish between two members of the same R-factor compatibility group, R931 and R3108. Images

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Journal ArticleDOI

R factor variants with enhanced sex factor activity in Pseudomonas aeruginosa

TL;DR: Results, combined with linkage studies, indicate that R68.45, unlike the Pseudomonas sex factors FP2 and FP39, promotes chromosome transfer from a range of origin sites and can thus be used for mapping the region of the P. aeruginosa chromosome later than 40 min.
Journal ArticleDOI

The properties and host range of male-specific bacteriophages of Pseudomonas aeruginosa.

Vilma A. Stanisich
- 01 Oct 1974 - 
TL;DR: Three Pseudomonas aeruginosa phages specific for bacteria harbouring the P-group plasmid RP1 have been isolated, and their properties compared with a previously described sex-specific phage, PRR1, suggest that all these plasmids share a common ancestry.
Journal ArticleDOI

Properties of R plasmids determining gentamicin resistance by acetylation in Pseudomonas aeruginosa.

TL;DR: Two clinical isolates of Pseudomonas aeruginosa could transfer gentamicin resistance by conjugation, and four plasmids in this incompatibility group determine additional biological properties, including resistance to inorganic and organic mercury compounds, to ultraviolet light, and to certain deoxyribonucleic acid phages.
Journal ArticleDOI

Molecular analysis of R-factors from multiresistant nosocomial isolates.

TL;DR: The epidemic of multiresistant infections at this hospital was caused both by the spread of an epidemic strain and an "epidemic plasmid," and the molecular characteristics of pLST1000 appear to be different from previously described multireistant plasmids.
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Journal ArticleDOI

Properties of an R Factor from Pseudomonas aeruginosa

TL;DR: The R factor was transferable from E. coli to bacterial genera outside the Enterobacteriaceae (Pseudomonas and members of the Rhizobiaceae) to which transfer of F-like and I-like plasmids could not be demonstrated.
Journal ArticleDOI

The interaction of closed circular DNA with intercalative dyes. I. The superhelix density of SV40 DNA in the presence and absence of dye

TL;DR: The binding results have allowed us to estimate the dependence of the sedimentation coefficient of SV40 I DNA upon the number of superhelical turns in the presence of dye, and that SV40 DNA contains about −13 superhelicals turns in concentrated salt solutions.
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