Publication | Closed Access
Random insertion mutagenesis of the intracellular pathogen Rhodococcus equi using transposomes
32
Citations
15
References
2001
Year
Reverse GeneticsGeneticsMolecular BiologyBacterial PathogensIntracellular Pathogen RhodococcusAntimicrobial ResistanceKanamycin ResistanceVirulence FactorDna ReplicationRandom Insertion MutagenesisMolecular MicrobiologyKanamycin Resistance GeneAntimicrobial Resistance GeneNatural SciencesPathogenesisRandom IntegrationMicrobiologyMedicineMutagenesisMicrobial Genetics
The identification of virulence factors in Rhodococcus equi has been severely hampered by the lack of a method for in vivo random insertion mutagenesis. This study reports the use of transposomes to generate random insertions of a gene conferring kanamycin resistance into the genome of R. equi ATCC 33701. Southern hybridisation using the kanamycin resistance gene as probe showed that insertion of transposome is random. This was confirmed following nucleotide sequence analysis of the junction between the transposome and chromosomal DNA. The presence of a 9 bp duplication of the target sequence showed that random integration of the transposome was due to a bona fide Tn5 transposition event.
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