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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, June 2003, p. 3263-3271, Vol. 69, No. 6
0099-2240/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.69.6.3263-3271.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Identification and Characterization of the Conjugal Transfer Region of the pCg1 plasmid from Naphthalene-Degrading Pseudomonas putida Cg1
Woojun Park,1 Che Ok Jeon,1 Amy M. Hohnstock-Ashe,1 Stephen C. Winans,1 Gerben J. Zylstra,2 and Eugene L. Madsen1*
Department of Microbiology, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853-8101,1
Biotechnology Center for Agriculture and the Environment, Cook College, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, New Jersey 08901-85202
Received 3 October 2002/
Accepted 10 March 2003

ABSTRACT
Hybridization and restriction fragment length polymorphism data
(K. G. Stuart-Keil, A. M. Hohnstock, K. P. Drees, J. B. Herrick,
and E. L. Madsen, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 64:3633-3640, 1998)
have shown that pCg1, a naphthalene catabolic plasmid carried
by
Pseudomonas putida Cg1, is homologous to the archetypal naphthalene
catabolic plasmid, pDTG1, in
P. putida NCIB 9816-4. Sequencing
of the latter plasmid allowed PCR primers to be designed for
amplifying and sequencing the conjugal transfer region in pCg1.
The mating pair formation (
mpf) gene,
mpfA encoding the putative
precursor of the conjugative pilin subunit from pCg1, was identified
along with other
trb-like
mpf genes. Sequence comparison revealed
that the 10
mpf genes in pCg1 and pDTG1 are closely related
(61 to 84% identity) in sequence and operon structure to the
putative
mpf genes of catabolic plasmid pWW0 (TOL plasmid of
P. putida) and pM3 (antibiotic resistance plasmid of
Pseudomonas. spp). A polar mutation caused by insertional inactivation in
mpfA of pCg1 and reverse transcriptase PCR analysis of mRNA
showed that this
mpf region was involved in conjugation and
was transcribed from a promoter located upstream of an open
reading frame adjacent to
mpfA. lacZ transcriptional fusions
revealed that
mpf genes of pCg1 were expressed constitutively
both in liquid and on solid media. This expression did not respond
to host exposure to naphthalene. Conjugation frequency on semisolid
media was consistently 10- to 100-fold higher than that in liquid
media. Thus, conjugation of pCg1 in
P. putida Cg1 was enhanced
by expression of genes in the
mpf region and by surfaces where
conditions fostering stable, high-density cell-to-cell contact
are manifest.

INTRODUCTION
Horizontal gene transfer (HGT) is the transmission of DNA between
organisms of different lineages (
5,
28,
53). An understanding
of HGT is important because of its implication in the spread
of antibiotic resistance genes (
9), in the possible exchange
of genes between genetically engineered and native microorganisms
(
10), in interactions between plants and bacteria (
61), and
in the dissemination of genes involved in pollutant biodegradation
(
18,
26,
40) and metal resistance (
34,
51). It is becoming increasingly
apparent that HGT has played an integral role in the evolution
of bacterial species (
55). One of the mechanisms of HGT is conjugation
(
28). Bacterial conjugation is a subject of ongoing scientific
inquiry that explores how DNA is transmitted from donor to recipient
cells via physical contact (
31). The conjugation process may
involve a combination of DNA rolling-circle replication with
a type IV secretion system (
32). While the role of pili in establishing
cell-cell contact is widely accepted, conveyance of DNA through
pili to a recipient cell is still under debate (
32).
One of the most intensively studied conjugal transfer systems is the broad-host-range enteric plasmid RP4 (IncP
). RP4 conjugal transfer is encoded by two regions, Tra1 and Tra2, which account for almost half of the 60-kb plasmid DNA (41). The Tra1 region encodes the primase, relaxase, the leader operon, and one protein involved in mating pair formation (41). Tra2 genes (termed trb) code for mating pair formation proteins (29, 30). Many of the Tra2 gene products are homologous to those of the virB region of the Ti plasmid of Agrobacterium (31). The mpf (for mating pair formation; trb) gene homologues are believed to encode the mating pair formation apparatus essential for the physical contact and DNA translocation between donor and recipient cells: for instance, the trbC gene encodes the precursor of the pilin subunit of the conjugal pilus (17). Conjugal DNA transfer is abolished by inactivation of the pilin precursor gene or of any gene involved in assembling the pilus (14, 17).
Despite their early discovery (e.g., references 11, 24, 47, 54, and 56), very little is known about regulation of conjugal transfer of catabolic plasmids in pseudomonads or about their surface requirement for conjugation. Electron microscopy and conjugation frequency observations suggested that the pili encoded by pWW0 (IncP-9, TOL plasmid of P. putida [15]) are thick, flexible, involved in surface-preferred conjugation, and distinct from the rigid pili encoded by IncP-1, IncI, IncW, and IncN plasmids that show surface-obligatory conjugation (4, 54). The plasmids carried by bacteria native to our coal tar-contaminated study site are closely related to the archetypal naphthalene catabolic plasmid pDTG1 (52). This plasmid has recently been sequenced by G. Zylstra (GenBank accession no. AF491307). Several genes in the naphthalene catabolic operon (nahAc [iron sulfur protein, large subunit of naphthalene dioxygenase], nahR [transcriptional regulator for naphthalene degradation], and intergenic region between nahR and nahG [salicylate hydroxylase]) from the naphthalene catabolic plasmid pCg1 in P. putida Cg1 were previously detected with degenerate primer pairs and characterized (20, 43). Sequence analysis showed that these regions were identical to those genes of pDTG1. In this report, putative mpf genes (trb-type genes) were identified on the naphthalene catabolic plasmids pCg1 and pDTG1. Sequence comparisons showed that the mpf genes in pCg1 and pDTG1 are closely related in sequence and operon structure to those in pWW0. Furthermore, the influence of solid surfaces and induction of the mpf genes on conjugal transfer of pDTG1-like plasmids were investigated.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Bacterial strains and growth conditions.
Strains and plasmids used in this study are listed in Table
1.
P. putida NCIB 9816-4 and
P. putida Cg1 naphthalene-degrading
strains have been described elsewhere (
20,
42,
43,
52).
P. putida KT2440-Tc was kindly provided by Niels Kroer (Department of
Marine Ecology and Microbiology, National Environmental Research
Institute, Roskilde, Denmark). All media and growth condition
for
Escherichia coli strains were prepared as described by Ausubel
et al. (
1). All
Pseudomonas strains were grown at 22°C in
mineral salts broth (MSB) and other routine media described
elsewhere (
21,
52). Rifampin (100 µg/ml), tetracycline
(15 µg/ml), kanamycin (100 µg/ml), and X-Gal (5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-ß-
D-galactopyranoside;
40 µg/ml) were added to broth or agar plates when necessary.
DNA and plasmid manipulation.
Primers used in this study are listed in Table
2. Restriction
fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) characterization of the
mpf regions in pDTG1 and pCg1 was performed by using the primer
pairs listed in Table
2. In RFLP analysis, each fragment was
digested with
HaeIII and
HhaI (Promega) and was electrophoresed
on a 3% agarose gel (Metaphor agarose; BMA). Colony PCR and
cloning for sequencing were carried out by the following procedures:
a 10-µl volume of sterile water was added to each PCR
tube, and bacterial cells were transferred to the PCR tube with
a sterile platinum needle from a freshly grown colony. The cells
were lysed (95°C for 5 min) in a PTC-200 thermocycler (MJ
Research Inc., Watertown, Mass.). The 50-µl volume reaction
mixture in each tube contained each primer (0.5 µM), 1
x PCR buffer (Gibco BRL, Gaithersburg, Md.), deoxynucleoside triphosphate
(0.2 mM), MgCl
2 (1.5 mM), and 1.25 U of
Taq DNA polymerase (Gibco
BRL). A cycling regimen of 94°C for 5 min (one cycle), 94°C
for 1 min, 55°C for 30 s, 72°C for 1 min (35 cycles),
and 72°C for 5 min (one cycle) was employed. Amplicons were
separated by electrophoresis in a 2% agarose gel. Amplified
PCR fragments were cloned into the pCR2.1 TA vector (Invitrogen,
Carlsbad, Calif.). The constructed plasmids were introduced
into
E. coli INV-

F' competent cells (Invitrogen). Both directions
of the insert fragments were sequenced, and all sequencing was
completed on an ABI model 3700 instrument at the Biological
Resource Center, Cornell University. The DNA sequences were
aligned by using the MegAlign program, and all sequence comparisons
were computed as percent identity by using Clustal (DNASTAR,
Madison, Wis.).
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TABLE 2. Primers used in this study to amplify and analyze portions of a 26.8-kb region of naphthalene catabolic plasmids pDTG1 and pCg1a
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Construction of polar mutation in the mpf region.
The suicide translational fusion vector pVIK110 (
27) was used
for constructing a polar mutation of
mpf regions (Fig.
1A).
Primer pair mpfA-F/mpfA-R was designed to target an internal
region of a putative
mpfA gene. The amplified 192-bp fragment
of the internal
mpfA fragment gene was cloned into the
KpnI-
SalI
cloning sites of pVIK110, creating the pMPF plasmid (full sequencing
of the modification of pVIK110 verified that the sought genetic
construct was achieved [Fig.
1A]), which was introduced into
E. coli S-17-1
pir. Then conjugation was performed by filter
mating with
E. coli S-17-1
pir (pMPF) and
P. putida Cg1 as donor
and recipient bacteria, respectively. The transconjugants (
P. putida Cg1pMPF) were selected on MSB-P medium (MSB plus 0.1%
pyruvate) containing kanamycin at room temperature (22°C).
Confirmation of transconjugants was conducted by PCR using primers
specific to pCg1 or pVIK110. The expected PCR fragment was amplified
only in the transconjugant (data not shown).
RT-PCR.
Reverse transcriptase PCR (RT-PCR) was performed on total RNA
extracted from
P. putida Cg1. Primers (orf25-F, mpfA-R, and
mpfB-R) used for RT-PCR are listed in Table
2. Total RNA was
extracted according to the manufacturer's procedure (RNeasy
mini kit; Qiagen). The extracted total RNA was treated with
DNase I (Gibco BRL) for 15 min at 37°C. DNase I was inactivated
with boiling at 70°C for 10 min. Reverse transcription and
PCR were performed by using Superscript II RT (Gibco BRL) as
follows: the 50-µl volume reaction mixture in each tube
contained each primer (1 µM), 2
x reaction buffer (Gibco
BRL), and 1 µl of RT/
Taq polymerase mixture (Gibco BRL).
A cycling regimen of 50°C for 20 min and 94°C for 2
min (one cycle) for cDNA synthesis and of 94°C for 30 s,
55°C for 30 s, 72°C for 1 min (35 cycles), and 72°C
for 5 min (one cycle) for PCR was used. To confirm that cDNA
synthesis occurred and that RNA preparation was free of genomic
DNA, negative control RT-PCR was performed only with
Taq polymerase.
Construction of mpfA-lacZ fusions.
Two independent reporter fusions were constructed and used, i.e., pEM1 and pAH7. The suicide transcriptional fusion vector pVIK112 (27) was used for constructing an mpfA-lacZ transcriptional fusion reporter system (Fig. 1B). The PCR fragment containing parA-F and mpfA-R2 (Table 2) was cloned into TA cloning vector pCR2.1. EcoRI-digested fragments were cloned into the EcoRI site of pVIK112, creating plasmid pEM1. In addition, the suicide translational fusion vector pVIK110 was used for constructing a translational fusion reporter system. For this, the PCR fragment with parA-F and mpfA-R2 was cloned into pVIK110, creating pAH7 (analogous to pEM1 in Fig. 1B), after digestion with KpnI and SalI restriction enzymes. The orientation of the fragments was confirmed by sequencing the cloned region in the pEM1 and pAH7 plasmids. Then the same cloning and transformation procedures described for creating the polar mutation in the mpf region (above) were applied in constructing P. putida Cg1pEM1 (P. putida Cg1 containing mpfA-lacZ transcriptional fusion on pCg1) and P. putida Cg1pAH7 (P. putida Cg1 containing mpfA-lacZ translational fusion on pCg1).
ß-Galactosidase activity assay.
ß-Galactosidase activity was measured by using a microtiter plate modification (49) of the original method of Miller (35). ß-Galactosidase activities were measured by using o-nitrophenyl ß-D-galactopyranoside (10 mg of it per ml in 0.1 M KPO4, pH 7.0) as a substrate. MSB-N (MSB plus 0.1% naphthalene crystals) and MSB-G (MSB plus 10 mM glucose) were used as the minimal medium.
Conjugation frequency.
P. putida Cg1pEM1 served as the donor and P. putida KT2440-Tc (39) served as the recipient in standard filter mating as described elsewhere (52). Donor cells (
107 to 109, grown overnight in Luria-Bertani [LB] broth, in MSB-G and in MSB-N amended with 100 µg of kanamycin/ml) were harvested and washed with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) (1). To the same tube,
107 to 109 recipient cells grown overnight in LB broth were added and harvested by centrifugation. For solid medium conjugation, cells were resuspended in 50 µl of PBS, collected on a sterile filter (0.2-µm pore size, 25-mm diameter; Millipore, Bedford, Mass.), and placed on an LB or MSB-G plate. The plate contents were incubated for 1 to 24 h, agar side down, at room temperature. After mating, filters were removed and vortexed in 1 ml of PBS for 30 s to disperse the cells. For liquid medium conjugation, cells were resuspended with 50 µl of LB or MSB-G broth and were incubated at room temperature. After mating for 1 to 24 h, serial dilutions were prepared and transconjugants were enumerated on LB plates amended with kanamycin and tetracycline. Donor cells only were enumerated on LB plates amended with kanamycin, and recipient cells only were enumerated on LB plates amended with tetracycline. Donors were also plated on LB amended with kanamycin and tetracycline to account for spontaneous tetracycline resistance, while recipients were also plated onto LB amended with kanamycin and tetracycline to account for potential experimental errors. No spontaneous mutants of donor or recipient cells appeared on the selective media during the entire conjugation assays.
Nucleotide sequence accession number.
The nucleotide sequences of the entire pDTG1 plasmid of P. putida NCIB 9816-4 have been deposited by G. Zylstra (Rutgers University) in GenBank under accession no AF491307. The nucleotide-numbering system in this paper differs from that of the GenBank submission. Nucleotides 1 to 28886 described here correspond to nucleotides 61380 to 83042 and 1 to 5223 in GenBank. The nucleotide sequences of pCg1 covering traA (634 bp) and orf25-mpfB (1,629 bp) have been deposited in GenBank under accession numbers AY249146 and AY249147.

RESULTS
Identification and sequence analysis of mpf regions from plasmid pCg1.
The map of a 26.8-kb portion of pDTG1/pCg1 shows that it has
tra and
trb (referred to henceforth as
mpf) regions (Fig.
2).
To confirm and extend prior measures (
43,
52) of homology between
pDTG1 and pCg1, we conducted RFLP analysis of PCR-amplified
tra and
mpf regions by using primers listed in Table
2 (primers
493F/1272R [780-bp product], 1629F/2437R [809-bp product], 4122F/5108R
[987-bp product], 6779F/7510R [732-bp product], 9422F/10591R
[1,170-bp product], 12475F/13114R [639-bp product], 17460F/18239R
[780-bp product]; and 19699F/20391R [693-bp product]). Over
a

20-kb region both plasmids showed indistinguishable patterns
(data not shown). Sequence comparison of the fragments amplified
with primer pairs (tra-F/traB-R, parA-F/mpfA-R2, and orf25-F/mpfB-R;

2.5 kb) confirmed that in these regions pCg1 was 100% identical
to pDTG1.
As shown in Fig.
2 and Table
3, there is considerable similarity
in both the order and sequence of many open reading frames in
the putative transfer regions in pCg1, pDTG1, pWW0 (TOL plasmid
in
P. putida; IncP-9 incompatibility group [
15]), and pM3 (IncP-9
incompatibility group; found in 16 isolates of
P. putida species
originating from farmland soil in Belarus, from industrial site
soil in Belarus and Azerbaijan, and from sewage from a pharmaceutical
plant in Belarus [
16]). Nine of the 10 genes in the
mpf cluster
in pDTG1/pCg1 have their closest homologue (65 to 87% identity)
in pWW0. The closest match to the remaining gene (
mpfA) was
in pM3 (73% identity). Two other matches between pDTG1/pCg1
and pM3 homologues were also high (70 and 77% identity). Figure
2 further reveals that there are four
tra-like genes shared
by pWW0 and pDTG1/pCg1. The
oriT region of pWW0 was identified
between the
traD and
traA genes (
15). The putative
oriT site
of pDTG1/pCg1 is also present between
traD and
traA genes, and
its sequence is 100% identical to the
oriT site of pWW0.
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TABLE 3. Summary of computer-based nucleotide sequence analyses of open reading frames in the conjugal transfer regions in pDTG1/pCg1 plasmids
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An extended comparison of
mpfA-related proteins (Fig.
3) confirms
close relatedness between pDTG1/pCg1 and pM3/pWW0 (

72% identity)
and distant relatedness (11.6% identity) to well-characterized
trbC genes of broad-host-range enteric plasmids IncP

(RP4) and
IncPß (R751). The matrix in Fig.
3 also shows a moderate
match between MpfA and VirB2 of pXAC64 of
Xanthomonas axonopodis pv.
citri. (
8) and pTiC58 of
Agrobacterium tumefaciens. Relatedness
is confirmed by sequence comparison between structural genes
adjacent to
mpfA and corresponding genes in VirbB (pXAC64) and
Trb (pM3) systems (Table
3; Fig.
2).
Insertional inactivation of the mpfA gene.
The
mpfA gene is predicted to encode the precursor of the pilin
subunit of the conjugal pilus based on homology with other known
pilin subunit genes. To test the hypothesis that
mpfA of pCg1
is critical for conjugation, perhaps playing the role of other
trbC-type products, we disrupted it by using Campbell-type single-crossover
recombination (Fig.
1A). The insertional inactivation used was
designed to cause a polar mutation and disrupt other genes downstream
of
mpfA as well, should expression of these be controlled by
a shared promoter. A standard filter mating was performed between
P. putida Cg1pMPF and
P. putida Cg1CR (
52). Conjugation was
not detected. The number of transconjugants and the number of
spontaneous rifampin-resistant colonies per donor were equal
(10
-7). In contrast, the positive control filter mating performed
between wild-type
P. putida Cg1 donor and
P. putida Cg1CR recipient
yielded 10
-3 transconjugants per donor and 10
-8 spontaneous
rifampin resistance colonies per donor (
22). This experiment
showed that the
mpf region of pCg1 plasmid is essential for
conjugation.
Detection of mpf gene transcripts by RT-PCR.
Computer analysis (Neural Network Promoter Prediction; http://www.fruitfly.org/seq_tools/promoter.html) showed that there is one putative promoter region upstream of mpfA and orf25 (hypothetical protein) (Fig. 2 and 4). To analyze expression of the mpf region, we extracted DNA-free total RNA from P. putida Cg1 grown in MSB liquid medium with naphthalene as the carbon source (MSB-N) or in LB broth. The extracted RNA was used as the template for RT reactions. Subsequently, the cDNA template was amplified with PCR primers yielding products corresponding to two intercistronic regions, i.e., orf25-mpfA and orf25-mpfA-mpfB (Fig. 4). Total RNA extracted from naphthalene-grown cells and LB broth-grown cells both showed amplified products of the anticipated sizes (Fig. 4). Negative control treatments that omitted RT did not yield any amplified products. This result (Fig. 4) indicated that expression of the mpf region was not linked to naphthalene utilization and that orf25, mpfA, and mpfB are cotranscribed.
Expression of PmpfA-lacZ reporter construct in P. putida Cg1.
For quantification of expression of the
mpfA gene, we constructed
an
mpfA promoter transcriptional fusion to
lacZ (P
mpfA-
lacZ).
This construct, pEM1 (Fig.
1B), contained the fragment extending
from a portion of partial
parA through
orf25 to just downstream
of the ATG start site of the
mpfA gene (+28 nucleotides). We
believe that this construct contained the promoter region of
the
mpf operon based on computer analysis and operon structure.
We measured ß-galactosidase activity in
P. putida Cg1pEM1 (22°C) in cells harvested from both liquid (Fig.
5A) and solid (Fig.
5B) preparations of three media. Promoter
activity of P
mpfA-
lacZ was increased when cells were grown in
rich medium (LB). The level of ß-galactosidase activity
of cells grown in LB liquid medium was roughly two times higher
than that of cells grown in MSB-N and MSB-G during the exponential
and stationary phases (Fig.
5A). The ß-galactosidase
activity measured by using cells grown in MSB-G liquid medium
was similar to the ß-galactosidase activity of cells
in MSB-N liquid medium (Fig.
5A). Thus, this expression was
not linked to naphthalene catabolic function of the pCg1 plasmid.
The expression of
mpf genes in the agar media was induced to
levels similar to those in liquid media (Fig.
5B). The RT-PCR
assay (that produced the data in Fig.
4) and the P
mpfA-lacZ reporter assays showed that the
mpf genes of pCg1 were constitutively
expressed even in the absence of naphthalene and were highly
expressed both in liquid and on semisolid media.
Because we recognize that the level of transcription is not
the same as the level of expression, we attempted to monitor
the promoter activity of the
mpf region by using a translational
fusion construct in
P. putida Cg1pAH7. However, that construct
failed to express ß-galactosidase activity in any
condition. The expression of ß-galactosidase did not
occur on semisolid or liquid media in the presence of recipient
cells (
22). An explanation for failure to detect ß-galactosidase
activity in
P. putida Cg1pAH7 is not straightforward. It is
possible that the constructed translational fusion suffered
from unstable transcripts or impaired initiation of translation
(
44).
Conjugation frequency of the pCg1 plasmid of P. putida Cg1.
Because the reporter assay above indicated that the expression of mpf region is constitutive and is higher in rich (LB) media than in minimal (MSB-G or MSB-N) media, we predicted that the conjugation frequency would be higher in LB-grown cells if the expression of the mpf region is the rate-limiting factor that governs conjugation frequency. We completed conjugation assays examining the influence of medium and other key variables (mating duration and the presence of a solid surface) on conjugation frequency (Table 4). Comparison of columns 5 and 6 shows that conjugal transfer of pCg1 was consistently higher (
100-fold) on solid media. The pattern within the first five lines of Table 4 (in which donor medium was held constant but mating time increased) indicates that conjugal transfer was roughly proportional to the duration of cell-cell contact. However, extensive incubation of donor and recipient cells beyond 6 (to 24) h did not increase the conjugation frequency. In addition, the trend in assays in which donor cells were prepared in minimal salt media (last four entries [Table 4]) indicates that a longer period was required for successful mating than for donor cells grown on LB broth. Data in Table 4 indicate that several factors, in addition to expression of the mpf region, influence conjugation frequency.
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TABLE 4. Influence of mating time, medium, and solid surface on conjugal transfer frequencies of pCg1 between P. putida Cg1 (host) and P. putida KT2440-Tc (recipient)
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DISCUSSION
Among the motivations for this study was a desire to understand
the mechanism by which naturally occurring microbial populations
at a coal tar-contaminated field site (
2,
20,
23,
33) adapt
to introduced organic substrates. Previously it has been shown
that Cg1-like plasmids, involved in horizontal transfer of naphthalene
catabolic genes between bacteria at the study site, are homologous
to the archetypal naphthalene catabolic plasmid pDTG1 from
P. putida NCIB 9816-4 (despite some variability in overall plasmid
sizes [e.g., pDTG1, 81 kb; and pCg1, 86 kb {52}]). This led
us to investigate further how pCg1 conjugation occurs and is
regulated. The entire pDTG1 plasmid has been sequenced (GenBank
accession no.
AF491307). In this study we have shown by using
RFLP and sequencing analysis that the conjugal transfer regions
in pCg1 and pDTG1 are closely related in sequence and operon
structure to the putative
mpf genes of broad-host-range plasmids
pWW0 and pM3. The incompatibility group of pDTG1 and pCg1 has
not been determined. Nonetheless, we feel it is prudent to deem
these plasmids "IncP-9-like" because pWW0 and pM3 and the closely
related plasmid from
P. putida NCIB 9816-3 all belong to the
IncP-9 group (
15,
52,
56). The
mpf genes of IncP-9 plasmids
along with
vir genes of pXAC64 share distinct sequence identity
and operon structure; thus, evolutionary divergence from other
plasmids is suggested.
We recognize that complex networks of transcriptional and translational regulatory systems often control plasmid conjugation (57-60). For example, in the trb operon (the genes for mating pair formation start with trbB) of plasmid RK2, it is thought that translational control on trbB transcripts is exerted by the trbA promoter (responsible for steady-state transcription of the trb operon as well as trbA). Furthermore, repression of the trbB promoter is exerted by both KorB and TrbA proteins (25, 36, 58, 60). Thus, it is likely that conjugal transfer genes in enteric IncP
plasmids (e.g., RK2 and RP4) are controlled by a network of regulatory elements (regulators and DNA sequences) that reduce the metabolic burden on the bacterial host. It is very probable that a regulatory system unlike that of the IncP
system operates in pDTG1/pCg1. Our data suggest that the mpf region of pCg1 is not controlled at the level of transcription because transcription was constitutive in the promoter-probing construct in P. putida Cg1pEM1 (Fig. 5).
It is notable that, although transcription of the mpf region of pCg1 occurs constitutively, conjugation frequency is low (Table 4). To place this frequency in perspective, the TOL plasmid of P. putida mt-2 (also thought to be naturally derepressed for conjugation) transfers at 2.5 x 10-1 transconjugants per donor h-1 (4). Consistent with data reported here on the key role of the mpfA pilin subunit in pCg1 conjugation, the thick, flexible conjugative pili encoded by the TOL plasmid (IncP-9) in P. putida mt-2 were found to be important for plasmid transfer (4). Interestingly, conjugation frequency of the TOL plasmid depends on the identity of the host cell. The number of transconjugants per donor cell dropped 1,000-fold when the host was altered from P. putida mt-2 to P. putida S388 (4). We have similar observations for conjugation of pDTG1/pCg1-like plasmids: the conjugation frequency of pCg1 in P. putida Cg1 after overnight mating on the filter is 10-3 to 10-4 (transconjugants per donor), yet conjugation is often below the detection limit (10-8) in the case of pDTG1 in P. putida NCIB 9816-4 (20, 43, 52). We conclude then (presuming that any sequence differences between pDTG1 and pCg1 are immaterial) that conjugation of pDTG1/pCg1-like plasmids is highly dependent upon the host in which the plasmids reside.
Systematic observation of relationships between solid surfaces and plasmid transfer has led to the proposal of three categories of conjugation (3, 4, 15): universal mating type (equal conjugation frequency on solid and in liquid medium; e.g., IncK, IncFII, and IncH1), surface-obligatory mating type (conjugation frequency is >2,000 times higher on a solid surface; e.g., IncP-1, IncI, IncW, and IncN), and the solid-preferred type (conjugation frequency is 45 to 450 times higher on a solid surface; e.g., IncP-7 and IncP-9). Data presented here clearly place pCg1 in the latter class (Table 4). Surface-preferred conjugation of pCg1 may be the result of IncP-9-type pili and related, stable mating pair formation on a semisolid surface, where high-density cell-to-cell contact is fostered. Solid surface-preferred conjugation is also observed in the Ti plasmids of Agrobacterium (13, 45). It has been thought that this surface, preference might result from the thick, flexible morphology of pili (12) or from biofilm formation that might increase conjugation frequency with quorum-sensing molecules (13, 45). Based on the observations above and discussion by others (4, 6, 7, 19, 37-39, 45, 46, 50), conjugation frequency is confirmed to be governed by many factors, including cell density, surfaces, growth rate, incubation time, media, pH, and moisture. Clearly the mpfA and/or cotranscribed genes in the conjugal transfer region of pCg1 are necessary but not sufficient for successful conjugation.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This research was supported by National Science Foundation grants
MCB-0084175 (to E.L.M.) and MCB-0078465 (to G.J.Z.).
Constructive criticism from three anonymous reviewers was appreciated.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Microbiology, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853-8101. Phone: (607) 255-3086. Fax: (607) 255-3904. E-mail:
elm3{at}cornell.edu.


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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, June 2003, p. 3263-3271, Vol. 69, No. 6
0099-2240/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.69.6.3263-3271.2003
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