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. 1984 Nov;3(11):2561–2567. doi: 10.1002/j.1460-2075.1984.tb02174.x

A transposon-like structure related to the delta-endotoxin gene of Bacillus thuringiensis.

D Lereclus, J Ribier, A Klier, G Menou, M M Lecadet
PMCID: PMC557730  PMID: 6096131

Abstract

A DNA segment (Th-sequence) has been found in several strains of Bacillus thuringiensis. This Th-sequence [3 megadaltons (Md)] induces adjacent deletions when it is located in the pAM beta 1 plasmid derived from Streptococcus faecalis. Electron microscopic examination of reannealed single strands of one plasmid (pMT9) carrying such a deletion revealed that the Th-sequence corresponds to a single-stranded loop (2.8 Md) bounded by a short double-stranded stem (less than 0.2 Md). Southern blotting experiments established that in B. thuringiensis the Th-sequence was generally located on the large plasmid which also harbours the gene coding for the delta-endotoxin (crystal protein). Hybridization and heteroduplex analysis of the extrachromosomal DNA from the berliner 1715 strain demonstrated that the crystal gene and the Th-sequence are located in close vicinity on a 42-Md plasmid and that they are separated by a 1.3-Md DNA segment. This DNA segment is repeated in inverted orientation, once immediately adjacent to the Th-sequence and once 1.8 Md beyond the crystal gene. A model for the organization of these DNA sequences inside a transposon-like structure is proposed.

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Selected References

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