Genetics, Vol. 152, 1307-1314, August 1999, Copyright © 1999

Molecular Analysis of pDL10 From Acidianus ambivalens Reveals a Family of Related Plasmids From Extremely Thermophilic and Acidophilic Archaea

Arnulf Kletzina, Angelika Liekea, Tim Uricha, Robert L. Charleboisb, and Christoph W. Sensenc
a Institute of Microbiology and Genetics, Darmstadt University of Technology, 64287 Darmstadt, Germany,
b Department of Biology, University of Ottawa, Ontario K1N 6N5, Canada
c Institute for Marine Biosciences, Halifax, Nova Scotia B3H 3Z1, Canada

Corresponding author: Arnulf Kletzin, Institute of Microbiology and Genetics, Darmstadt University of Technology, Schnittspahnstrasse 10, 64287 Darmstadt, Germany., kletzin{at}bio.tu-darmstadt.de (E-mail)

Communicating editor: F. PFEIFER


*  ABSTRACT
*TOP
*ABSTRACT
*MATERIALS AND METHODS
*RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
*LITERATURE CITED

The 7598-bp plasmid pDL10 from the extremely thermophilic, acidophilic, and chemolithoautotrophic Archaeon Acidianus ambivalens was sequenced. It contains 10 open reading frames (ORFs) organized in five putative operons. The deduced amino acid sequence of the largest ORF (909 aa) showed similarity to bacterial Rep proteins known from phages and plasmids with rolling-circle (RC) replication. From the comparison of the amino acid sequences, a novel family of RC Rep proteins was defined. The pDL10 Rep protein shared 45–80% identical residues with homologous protein genes encoded by the Sulfolobus islandicus plasmids pRN1 and pRN2. Two DNA regions capable of forming extended stem-loop structures were also conserved in the three plasmids (48–69% sequence identity). In addition, a putative plasmid regulatory protein gene (plrA) was found, which was conserved among the three plasmids and the conjugative Sulfolobus plasmid pNOB8. A homolog of this gene was also found in the chromosome of S. solfataricus. Single-stranded DNA of both pDL10 strands was detected with a mung bean nuclease protection assay using PCR detection of protected fragments, giving additional evidence for an RC mechanism of replication.


THE presence of a medium-sized multicopy number plasmid in the extremely thermophilic, acidophilic, and facultatively anaerobic Archaeon Acidianus ambivalens (formerly Desulfurolobus ambivalens) has been known since the organism was isolated by Zillig and co-workers (ZILLIG et al. 1985 Down, ZILLIG et al. 1986 Down). The organism is a chemolithoautotroph growing optimally at pH 2.5 and 80° in a mineral medium supplemented with elemental sulfur and under an atmosphere of either CO2/H2 or CO2-enriched air. It had been suggested originally that the plasmid might play a role in anaerobic growth because an increase of its copy number under anaerobic growth conditions had been observed (ZILLIG et al. 1985 Down, ZILLIG et al. 1986 Down). Later, the plasmid was found in several Icelandic isolates from geographically distant solfataric fields. However, its properties have not been analyzed in detail (ZILLIG et al. 1994 Down).

At present, only a small number of extrachromosomal genetic elements have been found and analyzed in Crenarchaeota or in extremely thermophilic Archaea. What we do know comes mostly from the systematic screening programs conducted by Wolfram Zillig and co-workers (reviewed in AAGAARD et al. 1996 Down; ZILLIG et al. 1996 Down, ZILLIG et al. 1998 Down; ARAVALLI and GARRETT 1997 Down; NOLL and VARGAS 1997 Down). Among these are the Sulfolobus islandicus high-copy number plasmids pRN1, pRN2, and pHE7 (ZILLIG et al. 1994 Down, ZILLIG et al. 1996 Down; KEELING et al. 1996 Down, KEELING et al. 1998 Down) and the large conjugative plasmid pNOB 8 from a Japanese S. solfataricus isolate (SCHLEPER et al. 1995 Down; ELFERINK et al. 1996 Down; SHE et al. 1998 Down). Only six sequences of crenarchaeotal genetic elements have been published. These include the plasmids pRN1, pRN2, and pNOB8, an S. solfataricus insertion element, and the viruses SSV 1 and TTV 1 (NEUMANN et al. 1989 Down; NEUMANN and ZILLIG 1990 Down; PALM et al. 1991 Down; SCHLEPER et al. 1994 Down; KEELING et al. 1996 Down, KEELING et al. 1998 Down; SHE et al. 1998 Down). In addition, the sequence and some properties are known from the plasmid pGT5 from the hyperthermophilic and sulfur-dependent euryarchaeote Pyrococcus abyssi (ERAUSO et al. 1996 Down; MARSIN and FORTERRE 1998 Down). These genetic elements have been used for the development of transformation systems for Sulfolobus and Pyrococcus (AAGAARD et al. 1996 Down; ELFERINK et al. 1996 Down; ARAVALLI and GARRETT 1997 Down; NOLL and VARGAS 1997 Down; CANNIO et al. 1998 Down). But despite intense research in many laboratories, no stable vector/host system is yet available that allows the selection and propagation of singly transformed strains. The difficulties arise from plasmid instability in Escherichia coli or in the Sulfolobus host cells and from lack of knowledge of plasmid regions essential for replication and maintenance (AAGAARD et al. 1996 Down; ARAVALLI and GARRETT 1997 Down; CANNIO et al. 1998 Down).

The mechanism of replication of the 3445-bp Pyrococcus abyssi plasmid pGT5 has been studied in some detail (ERAUSO et al. 1996 Down; MARSIN and FORTERRE 1998 Down). It was found that the plasmid replicates via a rolling-circle (RC) mechanism known from many bacterial plasmids and bacteriophages (reviewed in ILYINA and KOONIN 1992 Down; KHAN 1997 Down; RASOOLY and RASOOLY 1997 Down). Single-stranded DNA was detected with nondenaturing Southern hybridization experiments. The Rep protein encoded by one of the two open reading frames (ORFs) had a strand nicking and closing activity (ERAUSO et al. 1996 Down; MARSIN and FORTERRE 1998 Down). It was suggested that pRN1 might also replicate via a RC mechanism (KEELING et al. 1996 Down). However, no sequence similarity was found between pGT5 and the crenarchaeotal plasmids.

Here, we present the features of the A. ambivalens plasmid pDL10 and preliminary evidence for a RC mechanism of replication. From comparison to the distantly related S. islandicus plasmids pRN1 and pRN2 and to other RC plasmids and phages, we discuss the nature of the putative double-strand and single-strand origins and the phylogenetic relationship of a large plasmid-encoded Rep protein. The results allowed us to define a novel class of Rep proteins. Furthermore, conserved regions in these plasmids were found, which might be essential for replication and maintenance in the host cells.


*  MATERIALS AND METHODS
*TOP
*ABSTRACT
*MATERIALS AND METHODS
*RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
*LITERATURE CITED

Organism and growth conditions, DNA and RNA preparations:
A. (formerly Desulfurolobus) ambivalens DSM 3772 was grown aerobically and anaerobically as described (German Collection of Microorganisms, Braunschweig, Germany; ZILLIG et al. 1985 Down, ZILLIG et al. 1986 Down; FUCHS et al. 1996 Down). Total genomic DNA was prepared by the CTAB method combined with CsCl purification (ELLINGTON 1988 Down). A small amount of native pDL10 plasmid DNA was prepared with the QIAGEN plasmid mini kit (QIAGEN, Hilden, Germany). Total RNA was prepared from growing cultures of A. ambivalens by acidic phenol/guanidinium extraction (RNA-PURE-kit; Peqlab, Erlangen, Germany), followed by further purification over either RNeasy spin columns (QIAGEN, Hilden, Germany) or Qiagen Tip 20 columns according to a recommendation by the manufacturer, respectively. A Bacillus subtilis strain harboring the Staphylococcus aureus plasmid pE194 was obtained from the German Collection of Microorganisms (DSM 4554; Braunschweig, Germany).

Cloning and sequencing of pDL10:
The purified plasmid was inserted with the unique HindIII restriction site into pBluescript IIKS+ using standard protocols (construct pDL10-H6; Stratagene, La Jolla, CA; SAMBROOK et al. 1989 Down). Subclones were constructed by deleting different parts of the original construct with various restriction enzymes in several steps. The sequence of the entire plasmid was determined on both strands by sequencing the subclones with the help of universal and specifically synthesized primers. All sequencing was done on a LICOR automatic sequencer (MWG, Ebersberg, Germany). The uniqueness of the HindIII restriction site located in copG was checked by PCR amplification of the copG gene with specific primers (Figure 1, primer no. 5, GAG GGC GGC CGC GAT GAA GAA AAA GAG TCT ACA G; primer no. 6, CTT AAG CGC TGA TAA TGA TTA CCT GTT CTT TC, obtained from Interactiva, Ulm, Germany), cloning of the 236-bp product into the pCR-script vector (Stratagene), and sequencing. The pDL10 sequence was submitted to the EMBL database (accession no. AJ225333). The database entry is numbered from the unique SmaI site. The sequencing of the S. solfataricus genome has been described elsewhere (CHARLEBOIS et al. 1998 Down; SENSEN et al. 1998 Down).



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Figure 1. Genetic maps of the plasmid pDL10 from the thermoacidophilic archaeon A. ambivalens and of the S. islandicus plasmids pRN1 and pRN2. The putative protein-encoding genes are indicated by shaded arrows, and the numbers indicate their length in amino acid residues: rep, replication initiator protein; copG, copy number control protein; plrA, plasmid regulatory protein; P, palindromes; ; possible stem-loop structures. pDL10 was ligated with the unique HindIII site into pBluescript IIKS+. Primers used for the amplification and detection of single-stranded DNA are indicated by arrows, numbered 1–8; see MATERIALS AND METHODS for their sequences. C17 (pRN1) and C16G4 (pRN2) denote the position of C or CG stretches; no similar feature was found in pDL10. ORF90a and ORF90b in pRN1 are nonhomologous ORFs of the same size (KEELING et al. 1996 Down). Note that the dso and plrA genes are located downstream of sso in pRN1 and pRN2. In pDL10, they have a different position upstream of copG.

Southern analysis:
Digoxygenin-labeled, strand-specific RNA probes were synthesized from pDL10-H6 using T3 (Stratagene) or T7 RNA-polymerases with the DIG RNA-labeling kit according to the manufacturer's instructions (Roche Diagnostics, Mannheim, Germany). For a denaturing and a nondenaturing Southern, total genomic DNA, undigested and digested with appropriate restriction enzymes, was separated on 1% agarose gels and blotted to a nylon membrane (Pall Filtron, Dreieich, Germany), omitting the denaturing and neutralizing steps of the standard protocol prior to the transfer (SAMBROOK et al. 1989 Down). For control, the same DNA was separated and transferred under standard denaturing conditions. The hybridizing strand-specific RNA probes were detected according to the manufacturer's instructions (Roche Diagnostics).

PCR detection of single-stranded DNA:
For the detection of small amounts of single-stranded plasmid DNA the following protocol was developed: a combination of PCR with digestions using the restriction enzyme MseI (New England Biolabs, Beverly, MA) and the single strand-specific nuclease such as mung bean nuclease (MBN; Stratagene) or S1 nuclease (Roche Diagnostics). A total of 2 µg of genomic A. ambivalens DNA was digested with 10 units of the restriction enzyme MseI in a reaction volume of 50 µl in the buffer supplied by the manufacturer (recognition site: TT'AA). A total of 400 ng of the MseI-digested DNA was incubated with MBN or nuclease S1 in a total volume of 300 µl in the appropriate buffer followed by phenol/chloroform extraction and ethanol precipitation. The four fractions containing undigested DNA, MseI-digested DNA (1 µl of a 1:10 dilution each), MseI/MBN, or MseI/S1-digested DNA (1 µl undiluted) were subjected to PCR amplification with DAP DNA polymerase (Eurogentech, Seraing, Belgium) and several primer pairs (see below and Figure 1), including the copG-specific primers described above. The amplification reaction was performed in a volume of 50 µl on a Robocycler over 42 cycles (Stratagene). The amplified fragments were analyzed by electrophoresis on agarose gels (copG, 236 bp; DL10, 501 bp; rep, 2766 bp; SL10, 5735 bp). The amplification of PCR products after MseI digestion but not after MseI/MBN double digestion was indicative of the presence of single-stranded DNA. On the basis of these experiments, an MBN protection assay was developed to determine the strand specificity: A single PCR cycle was performed with 400 ng of the MseI-digested DNA (denaturation, 90 sec at 94°; annealing with either of the copG and SL10-primers, 90 sec at 56°; and a primer extension step with DAP DNA polymerase, 15 min at 70°). After phenol/chloroform extraction and ethanol precipitation, the samples were digested with MBN or S1 as described above. The protected double-stranded DNA was detected with PCR using the copG or the rep primers.

The sequences of the primers were as follows: SL10-1 (primer 1, Figure 1), AGAAGC TAGCCG AAGTAA GGTAAG TAAGGGC; SL10-2 (2), AATAGC GGCCGC ACTGCA CAC GAG CAAGGGGA; rep-N (3), GAATCT AGATAA CGAGGG CAAATC ATGAAT GATTTA AAGCTA AATTAC; rep-C (4), TTGCTT AAGCGC TCCCGG GCAAAG AGATTT CCCATG TG; DL10-P1 (7), ATTCTT CTCTCT AGAACA CGG; DL10-P2 (8), CTGTTT ACGTAA CCGTGA GAG. The kilobase ladder was from Stratagene and the {Phi}X174/HinfI small nucleic acid marker was from MBI Fermentas (Vilnius, Lithuania).

EMBL accession nos. are AJ225333 for pDL10 and Y18868 for S. solfataricus.


*  RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
*TOP
*ABSTRACT
*MATERIALS AND METHODS
*RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
*LITERATURE CITED

Sequence analysis of pDL10:
The circular multicopy double-stranded plasmid pDL10 from A. ambivalens (ZILLIG et al. 1985 Down, ZILLIG et al. 1986 Down; FUCHS et al. 1996 Down) was isolated from 0.5 g (wet weight) of anaerobically grown cells by the alkaline lysis method and purification over QIAGEN Tip 20 columns. The plasmid was ligated with its unique HindIII restriction site into the pBluescript IIKS+ vector (pDL10-H6). Its complete nucleotide sequence was determined on both strands. With PCR using primers flanking the HindIII site, the copG gene was amplified (see Figure 1 and below). With subsequent cloning and sequencing of the product, it was confirmed that the HindIII site present in pDL10 was unique.

The plasmid consisted of 7598 bp of DNA with a G + C content of 37%. It contained 10 ORFs between 60 and 909 amino acid residues in size spanning 75.3% of the total plasmid (Figure 1). The largest ORF, designated rep, encoded a protein similar in size and sequence to proteins encoded by the S. islandicus plasmids pRN1 and pRN2 (45–72% identical residues; Table 1, Figure 1 and Figure 2; KEELING et al. 1996 Down, KEELING et al. 1998 Down). This conserved hypothetical protein contained a nucleotide-binding domain (P loop; for review, see SARASTE et al. 1990 Down). It shared 21–26% identical residues with replication initiator proteins of bacterial RC-replicating phages and plasmids, including the satellite phage P4 from E. coli, the temperate phage Sfi 21 from Streptococcus thermophilus, the Lactococcus delbrueckii plasmid pWS58, and the actinophage Phi C-31 (see below and Figure 2). Similarity was also found to an ORF from the genome sequence of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Figure 2). We concluded that this ORF encoded the initiator protein of plasmid replication (Rep protein). Immediately preceding the rep gene, an ORF encoding a 72-aa protein was found, whose deduced amino acid sequence shared 23–30% identical residues with copy number control proteins from RC plasmids (CopG; Table 1 and Figure 1 and Figure 2). Similar copG genes had been recognized in pRN1 and pRN2 (Figure 1 and Figure 2; KEELING et al. 1996 Down, KEELING et al. 1998 Down). Another ORF encoded a 71-aa basic protein (calculated isoelectric point of 10.6), which showed a high degree of similarity to proteins from the plasmids pRN1 (ORF80), pRN2 (ORF81), and pNOB8 (ORF80; 49–80% identical residues; Table 2, Figure 1 and Figure 2; KEELING et al. 1996 Down, KEELING et al. 1998 Down; SHE et al. 1998 Down). The basic character of the five proteins implied a DNA-binding function, and their conservation suggested an essential role in plasmid maintenance, regulation of gene expression, or copy number control. The gene was termed plrA, encoding a putative plasmid regulatory protein (Figure 1 and Figure 2). Interestingly, a homolog was found in the S. solfataricus genome (accession no. Y18868; Table 2, Figure 1 and Figure 2). The deduced amino acid sequence of the chromosomal plrA gene shared 38–44% identical residues with the plasmid homologs. The gene was located on the chromosome adjacent to a second gene (plrB) encoding another short and basic protein with no similarity to known proteins. The two ORFs overlapped by 4 bp. There was a consensus promoter motif upstream of plrA, suggesting that plrAB forms an operon. The genes flanking plrAB did not have any recognizable similarity to known genes (data not shown). The function of plrA from S. solfataricus is not known. At present, we can only speculate that it might encode a regulatory protein.



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Figure 2. Multiple amino acid alignment of the conserved parts of the Rep (A), CopG (B), and PlrA proteins (C) highlighted with BOXSHADE (http://ulrec3.unil.ch/software/BOX_form.html/). Black shading was assigned when at least half of the sequences share an amino acid. (A) Partial alignment of the Rep proteins: Sfi 21, Streptococcus thermophilus temperate phage Sfi 21 (total length 382 aa; accession no. AF004379); P4, bacteriophage P4 primase (777 aa; X51522); PhC31, P9 from the actinophage Phi-C31 (AJ006589); Mtu, Mycobacterium tuberculosis hypothetical genomic protein MTCY336.22 (471 aa; Z95586). The motifs 1 and 3 denote the conserved Rep protein motifs identified by ILYINA and KOONIN 1992 Down; motif 2 ("HUHUUU") was not found in the sequences shown. (B) CopG protein alignment: pLS1, S. agalactiae plasmid pLS1 (M29725); pWV01, Lactococcus lactis plasmid pWV01 (X56954); pE194, Staphylococcus aureus cloning vector pE194 (L08862). A large number of similar CopG amino acid sequences from plasmids of gram-positive bacteria were identified in database searches but have been excluded from the alignment. (C) Alignment of the conserved putative regulatory proteins PlrA from pDL10, pRN1, pRN2, pNOB8, and S. solfataricus.


 
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Table 1. Pairwise comparison of the amino acid sequences of the Rep and CopG proteins (percentage identity/percentage similarity) and of the nucleotide sequences of the dso and sso regions (percentage identity)


 
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Table 2. Pairwise comparison of the amino acid sequences of the putative PlrA proteins

Comparison of pDL10 with the S. islandicus plasmids pRN1 and pRN2:
Four regions with significant sequence similarity were identified in the two pRN plasmids and pDL10: the rep gene, the plrA gene, an ~280-nt noncoding DNA region containing the putative single-strand origin (sso), and another 520–660-nt noncoding sequence containing long palindromes, the putative double-strand origin (dso; see below and Table 1, Figure 1 and Figure 3). Outside of these regions the nucleotide sequence similarity was <=44%, which is below the level of randomness in A + T-rich sequences. The Rep proteins of the three plasmids shared 45–72% identical aa residues, the PlrA proteins 58–80% (Table 2). The similarity between the Rep proteins of pDL10 and pRN2 was higher than the similarity of either of the two with the Rep protein of pRN1 (84 vs. 66–67%, Table 1). A different result was obtained for the PlrA protein, which was significantly more related between pRN1 and pRN2 (90% similarity vs. 73–74%; Table 2).



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Figure 3. (Top) MFOLD plot of the inverted repeats of the sso region from pDL10, pRN1, and pRN2 in comparison to the SSO site of the plasmid pLS1 from the gram-positive bacterium Streptococcus agalactiae. The shaded boxes in the pLS1 sequence highlight the -10 and -35 bacterial consensus promoter boxes, and the start sites of the RNA primer (pRNA) and the plasmid DNA are marked with arrows (modified and redrawn after KHAN 1997 Down; KRAMER et al. 1997 Down). (Bottom) Nucleotide sequence alignment of the conserved sso region downstream of the stop codons (boldface) of the rep genes of pDL10, pRN1, and pRN2. Double lines denote a conserved box of high A + T content (26 out of 30 in pDL10); the base-pairing nucleotides of the stem-loop structures shown above are underlined; vertical line at position 114 denotes the mirror line of the inversion in the repeats.

Rep proteins and RC replication:
The Rep proteins of pDL10, pRN1, and pRN2 and of P4, Sfi21, pWS58, Phi-C-31, and M. tuberculosis vary considerably in size (382–979 aa). However, they share a conserved region of ~300 aa residues flanking an A/GTP-binding motif (P loop; Figure 2; SARASTE et al. 1990 Down). Although the overall degree of conservation is low, 82 out of 295 positions are conserved in the alignment (Figure 2). No sequence similarity was found to RepB or RepC proteins from other RC-replicating plasmids from bacteria and from the hyperthermophilic archaeon P. abyssi.

All Rep proteins from RC replication plasmids and phages fall into at least five different families, and almost all of them have three sequence motifs in common: motif 1 (UKxUTG; U represents an aa residue with a bulky and hydrophobic side chain), motif 2, the so-called "HUHUUU motif," and motif 3, which contains one or two active site tyrosine residues (see Figure 2; ILYINA and KOONIN 1992 Down; KHAN 1997 Down). The most prominent motif 2 can be found in a vast number of bacterial and archaeal Rep proteins, including the Rep proteins from the small halobacterial plasmid pGRD and relatives (AKHMANOVA et al. 1993 Down), the P. abyssi plasmid pGT5 (ERAUSO et al. 1996 Down), and the very small cryptic plasmid pRQ7 from the extremely thermophilic bacterium Thermotoga sp. RQ7 (YU and NOLL 1997 Down). However, the HUHUUU motif was not found in the sequences of the putative Rep proteins from pDL10, pRN1, and pRN2 or from P4, Sfi21, pWV58, and Phi-C31. In contrast, motifs 1 and 3 were identified in all of these sequences (Figure 2). We concluded that the Rep proteins from these plasmids and phages are phylogenetically related and belong to a hitherto unrecognized class of Rep proteins.

Whereas the putative Rep proteins of pDL10, pRN1, and pRN2 are more closely related to those of RC bacteriophages, all three archaeal plasmids share several features known from bacterial RC plasmids. The replication cycle of RC plasmids is initiated by the Rep protein, which introduces a nick at the double-strand origin (dso), generating a 3'-OH terminus (HELINSKI et al. 1996 Down; KHAN 1997 Down; MARSIN and FORTERRE 1998 Down). Melting of the DNA is facilitated by a region of high A + T content adjacent to an inverted repeat, capable of forming a stable cruciform, which enables the active site tyrosine residue of the Rep protein to attack the nicking target (for review, see HELINSKI et al. 1996 Down; KHAN 1997 Down; RASOOLY and RASOOLY 1997 Down). The plasmid pDL10 contains two perfect 26-mer palindromes in one of the noncoding regions flanking an imperfect palindrome (Figure 1). All three palindromes are able to form a stem-loop or a cruciform required by RC plasmids for the initiation of the leading-strand synthesis. Similar palindromes were found in pRN1 and pRN2 (48–60% identity; Figure 1). We concluded that this DNA region could be the DSO site of the three plasmids, in structural similarity to RC plasmids.

In addition, a putative sso adjacent to the stop codon of the rep gene of pDL10, pRN1, and pRN2 was identified (Table 1 and Figure 1 Figure 2 Figure 3). The sso consists of a structurally conserved 150-bp inverted repeat flanked by two regions with high sequence similarity (61–69% sequence identity; Figure 3). The inverted repeats in each of the three plasmids have little sequence similarity. However, all of them are capable of forming an extended stem-loop structure in structural similarity to the single-strand origin SSO of bacterial RC plasmids (SSO, Figure 3; KHAN 1997 Down; KRAMER et al. 1997 Down, KRAMER et al. 1998 Down). We concluded that this region contains the SSO of the three plasmids, where host-specific RNA polymerases initiate the replication of the lagging strand by synthesizing a short RNA primer from a specific palindromic site.

The copy number of bacterial RC plasmids is controlled by the cooperation of a copy number control protein (CopG) and other regulatory factors, such as anti-sense RNA (for review, see RASOOLY and RASOOLY 1997 Down). The copG gene is usually located immediately upstream of the rep gene. The three plasmids pDL10, pRN1, and pRN2 contain a homologous gene in a similar position. However, the degree of conservation is low (Table 1 and Figure 2).

When comparing the gene organization of pDL10, pRN1, and pRN2, conserved and variable regions can be distinguished. One of the conserved regions consisted of the copG and rep genes and the sso region immediately following the rep genes. The second region consisted of the 520–660-bp dso boxes containing two to three long palindromes followed by the plrA genes (Figure 1). The order of the two regions has been reversed in pDL10 compared to pRN1 and pRN2. We concluded that these two conserved regions should contain all the necessary information for plasmid replication and copy number control.

Detection of single-stranded plasmid DNA:
Denaturing and nondenaturing Southern blotting and hybridization experiments were performed with strand-specific RNA probes to detect single-stranded DNA in preparations of total genomic DNA. However, no hybridization signal was observed in nondenaturing Southern analysis with either of the probes. The control hybridizations done after denaturation of the DNA gave strong specific signals corresponding to the pDL10 plasmid or its restriction fragments (Figure 4A).



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Figure 4. (A) Southern transfer and hybridization under denaturing conditions using total DNA from A. ambivalens and strand-specific pDL10 RNA probes. +, hybridization with plus-strand RNA; -, hybridization with minus-strand RNA; kb, kilobase ladder; {oslash}, undigested DNA; H, HindIII-digested DNA; E, EcoRI-digested DNA. (B–D) MBN protection assay with pDL10 for the detection of single-stranded plasmid DNA with the rep primers (B), the copG primers (C), and the DL10 primers (D). Total A. ambivalens DNA was subjected to PCR amplification with the primers after different pretreatments, and the products were separated on agarose gels. The parallels in C represent different template dilutions in the PCR mixture. M, marker DNA (bp); -, undigested DNA; MseI, MseI-digested DNA; MseI/MBN or M/Mb, MseI plus MBN-digested DNA; M/S1, MseI plus nuclease S1-digested DNA; sense, anti-sense, DNA that was first MseI-digested, then subjected to a single PCR cycle with either of the copG or rep primers followed by MBN digestion. {Phi}, {Phi}X marker; {oslash}, no template. (E) Control experiment under the same conditions with the Staphylococcus aureus plasmid pE 194, propagated in B. subtilis.

A different PCR-based approach was used involving a novel MBN or nuclease S1 protection assay, both to detect single-stranded plasmid DNA and to determine the leading strand. For the detection of single-stranded DNA by PCR, total genomic DNA was first digested with the restriction enzyme MseI to degrade double-stranded DNA (recognition site TT'AA; 63 cleavage sites in pDL10). This was followed by MBN or S1 digestion to degrade single-stranded DNA. The PCR amplification of pDL10 DNA with various primer pairs gave positive results with MseI-digested DNA, but no product was seen with MseI plus MBN or MseI plus S1-digested DNA even after 42 cycles (Figure 4). Four different pDL10 PCR products were amplified with MseI-digested DNA as template. The longest fragment was 5735 bp in length, covering 75% of the total plasmid length and 56 out of 63 MseI recognition sites (Figure 4D). In a control experiment, DNA from a Bacillus subtilis strain harboring the plasmid pE194 was treated in the same way. pE194 plasmid DNA was only amplified from undigested template DNA, showing that background amplification in enzyme-treated DNA can be effectively prevented (Figure 4E). These results indicated the presence of single-stranded plasmid DNA in A. ambivalens and support the conclusion that pDL10 replicates via a RC mechanism.

A similar scheme was applied in an attempt to identify the leading strand of plasmid replication. MseI-digested total genomic DNA was subjected separately to a single PCR cycle with four different primers (copG and SL10 primers; see MATERIALS AND METHODS). The reaction mixtures were then subjected to MBN digestion followed by PCR amplification with various primer pairs. It was expected that only in the case of strand protection would a PCR product be obtained. Surprisingly, both strands were protected against MBN digestion with this method (Figure 4B and Figure C). The results might indicate that either strand can serve as a template for leading strand synthesis.

Transcription:
The ORFs of pDL10 are organized in five clusters that might represent transcriptional units (not shown). These were assigned when closely spaced or overlapping ORFs were found and when the putative operon unit had an archaeal consensus promoter motif upstream of the ATG translational start codon of the first ORF (box A; HAIN et al. 1992 Down). We tried to detect pDL10 transcripts in Northern blotting experiments with total RNA and strand-specific digoxygenin-labeled RNA probes synthesized from the T3 and T7 promoters of pDL10-H6 (performed after RODER and PFEIFER 1996 Down). However, no transcripts were detected with RNA from different growth phases of aerobically and anaerobically grown A. ambivalens cultures.

Plasmid stability and anaerobic growth:
In the course of this study, we observed that the plasmid levels in A. ambivalens cultures decreased significantly over a period of several years of continuous propagation in the laboratory. A low stability would impair its possible use as a cloning vector. As a consequence, a vector system based on pDL10 and possibly the pRN plasmids would require a strong selective pressure for plasmid maintenance.

The ability of the strain to grow anaerobically or to switch between aerobic and anaerobic growth conditions was not affected by the decreased plasmid levels (data not shown). It had been observed previously that the copy number of pDL10 increased when A. ambivalens was grown anaerobically and at relatively high pH (pH 4; ZILLIG et al. 1985 Down, ZILLIG et al. 1986 Down, ZILLIG et al. 1994 Down). It was postulated therefore that pDL10 might play an important role for the growth of the organism under anaerobic conditions. However, our observations speak against this hypothesis. In addition, we did not detect any plasmid-encoded genes with similarity to genes known to be involved in the energy metabolism or in regulatory mechanisms of archaea and bacteria. We concluded that pDL10 is not directly involved in anaerobic chemolithoautotrophic growth of A. ambivalens.

Conclusions:
The sequence analysis of pDL10 revealed several conserved genes or DNA regions, rep, plrA, copG, dso, and sso, which were also found in pRN1 and pRN2. These observations and the presence of single-stranded DNA in A. ambivalens cells indicate that the three archaeal plasmids might replicate via a RC mechanism. The comparison of related plasmids from extremely thermophilic Archaea allowed us to distinguish between variable and possibly disposable regions and regions that are essential for plasmid replication and maintenance in the host cell. This knowledge is important for the construction of transformation vectors and can also serve as a basis for the development of an in vitro replication system.


*  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We thank Felicitas Pfeifer, Darmstadt, for support and encouragement, Wolfram Zillig, Martinsried, for a long and fruitful time in his laboratory and for the plasmid source, and Christa Schleper for critically reading the manuscript. This is National Research Council publication number 42294.

Manuscript received March 20, 1999; Accepted for publication May 13, 1999.


*  LITERATURE CITED
*TOP
*ABSTRACT
*MATERIALS AND METHODS
*RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
*LITERATURE CITED

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