An <i>rpsL</i> Cassette, Janus, for Gene Replacement through Negative Selection in <i>Streptococcus pneumoniae</i>

Chieh‐Ju Sung(University of Illinois Chicago), Henan Li(University of Illinois Chicago), J.P. Claverys(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Donald A. Morrison(University of Illinois Chicago)
Applied and Environmental Microbiology
November 1, 2001
Cited by 423Open Access
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Abstract

Natural genetic transformation offers a direct route by which synthetic gene constructs can be placed into the single circular chromosome of Streptococcus pneumoniae. However, the lack of a general negative-selection marker has hampered the introduction of constructs that do not confer a selectable phenotype. A 1.3-kb cassette was constructed comprising a kanamycin (Kn) resistance marker (kan) and a counterselectable rpsL(+) marker. The cassette conferred dominant streptomycin (Sm) sensitivity in an Sm-resistant background in S. pneumoniae. It was demonstrated that it could be used in a two-step transformation procedure to place DNA of arbitrary sequence at a chosen target site. The first transformation into an Sm-resistant strain used the cassette to tag a target gene on the chromosome by homologous recombination while conferring Kn resistance but Sm sensitivity on the recombinant. Replacement of the cassette by an arbitrary segment of DNA during a second transformation restored Sm resistance (and Kn sensitivity), allowing construction of silent mutations and deletions or other gene replacements which lack a selectable phenotype. It was also shown that gene conversion occurred between the two rpsL alleles in a process that depended on recA and that was susceptible to correction by mismatch repair.


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