Preparation of a DNA gene probe for detection of mercury resistance genes in gram-negative bacterial communities

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Abstract

A DNA gene probe was prepared to study genetic change mechanisms responsible for adaptation to mercury in natural bacterial communities. The probe was constructed from a 2.6-kilobase NcoI-EcoRI DNA restriction fragment which spans the majority of the mercury resistance operon (mer) in the R-factor R100. The range of specificity of this gene probe was defined by hybridization to the DNA of a wide variety of mercury-resistant bacteria previously shown to possess the mercuric reductase enzyme. All of the tested gram-negative bacteria had DNA sequences homologous to the mer probe, whereas no such homologies were detected in DNA of the gram-positive strains. Thus, the mer probe can be utilized to study gene flow processes in gram-negative bacterial communities.

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Barkay, T., Fouts, D. L., & Olson, B. H. (1985). Preparation of a DNA gene probe for detection of mercury resistance genes in gram-negative bacterial communities. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 49(3), 686–692. https://doi.org/10.1128/aem.49.3.686-692.1985

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