Structure of Inserted Bacteriophage Mu-1 DNA and Physical Mapping of Bacterial Genes by Mu-1 DNA Insertion

  1. Ming-Ta Hsu and
  2. Norman Davidson
  1. 1Division of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, Calif. 91109

Abstract

It is shown, by electron microscope observation of the structures of heteroduplexes, that Mu-1 DNA inserted into the bacterial episomes Flac and F8[1] is collinear with, rather than a circulation permutation of, the DNA of the mature Mu-1 bacteriophage. Observation of the position of the inserted Mu defines a point within the gene that has been inactivated (the lacI gene for Flac and a transfer gene in F8[1] in these particular instances). These examples illustrate a new, general method for physical gene mapping. The episome with Mu DNA inserted into F8[1] [i.e., F8[1](Mu)], although derived from a single colony, is heterogeneous in that a self-renatured sample shows a nonhomology loop of length 3.0 kb. This nonhomology loop, which has previously been observed in mature Mu-1 DNA, is due to an inversion.

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