Publication | Open Access
Characterization of concatemeric plasmids of Neisseria gonorrhoeae
12
Citations
14
References
1983
Year
Concatemeric PlasmidsNatural SciencesVirulence FactorPathogenesisBacteriologyMolecular BiologyDna ReplicationPlasmid Dna7.8-Mdal PlasmidsPathogen CharacterizationMicrobiologyInfection ControlMolecular MicrobiologyMedicineCryptic PlasmidClinical MicrobiologyHost-pathogen InteractionsMicrobial Genetics
Three strains of Neisseria gonorrhoeae carried novel plasmids of 7.8 megadaltons (mdal) molecular mass in addition to plasmids previously observed in this organism. The presence of the 7.8-mdal plasmids was not accompanied by any distinguishable phenotype in the strain possessing them. Analysis of plasmid DNA with restriction endonucleases showed that these plasmids were composed of three directly repeated copies of a 2.6-mdal cryptic plasmid frequently found in N. gonorrhoeae. In addition, the 7.8-mdal plasmids exhibited characteristics common to the 2.6-mdal plasmid, structural lability and sites resistant to cleavage with HpaII. The concatemeric forms of the cryptic plasmid appear to be stable in these strains and do not undergo internal recombination to produce the 2.6-mdal monomer, nor were higher concatemers detected.
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