Applied and Environmental Microbiology, February 1999, p. 752-758, Vol. 65, No. 2
0099-2240/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Department of Microbiology, Technical University of Denmark, DK-2800 Lyngby, Denmark
Received 15 July 1998/Accepted 23 November 1998
Previously we showed that only one phage-expressed protein (Orf1),
a 425-bp region upstream of the orf1 gene (presumably
encoding a promoter), and the attP region are necessary and
also sufficient for integration of the bacteriophage TP901-1 genome
into the chromosome of Lactococcus lactis subsp.
cremoris (B. Christiansen, L. Brøndsted, F. K. Vogensen, and K. Hammer, J. Bacteriol. 178:5164-5173, 1996). In
this work, a further analysis of the phage-encoded elements involved in
integration was performed. Here we demonstrate that even when the
orf1 gene is separated from the attP region,
the Orf1 protein is able to promote site-specific integration of an attP-carrying plasmid into the attB site on the
L. lactis subsp. cremoris chromosome.
Furthermore, the first detailed deletion analysis of an
attP region of a phage infecting lactic acid bacteria was
carried out. We show that a fragment containing 56 bp of the attP region, including the core, is sufficient for the
site-specific integration of a nonreplicating plasmid into the
chromosome of L. lactis subsp. cremoris
when the orf1 gene is donated in trans. The
functional 56-bp attP region of TP901-1 is substantially
smaller than minimal attP regions identified for other
phages. Based on the deletion analysis, several repeats located within
the attP region seem to be necessary for site-specific
integration of the temperate bacteriophage TP901-1. By use of the
integrative elements (attP and orf1) expressed
by the temperate lactococcal bacteriophage TP901-1, a system for
obtaining stable chromosomal single-copy transcriptional fusions in
L. lactis was constructed. Two promoter-reporter integration vectors containing the reporter gene gusA or
lacLM, encoding
-glucuronidase or
-galactosidase,
respectively, were constructed. Immediately upstream of both genes are
found translational stop codons in all three reading frames as well as
multiple restriction enzyme sites suitable for cloning of the promoter
of interest. By transformation of L. lactis subsp.
cremoris MG1363 containing the integrase gene on a
replicating plasmid, the promoter-reporter integration vectors
integrated with a high frequency site specifically into the chromosomal
attachment site attB used by bacteriophage TP901-1.
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