Molecular cloning of the fnr gene of Escherichia coli K12

Abstract
Mutations in the fnr gene of Escherichia coli have pleiotropic effects leading to deficiencies in the reduction of fumarate and nitrate, hydrogen production and the ability to grow anaerobically with fumarate or nitrate as terminal electron acceptors. Transducing phages (λfnr) carrying the wild-type fnr gene were isolated from populations of artificially-constructed recombinant lambda phages by their ability to complement the lesions of fnr mutants. The λfnr phages restored anaerobic growth with fumarate and nitrate as electron acceptors and, as prophages, they promoted normal synthesis of fumarate reductase, nitrate reductase and hydrogenase in fnr mutants. Five independently-isolated λfnr phages each contained a R.HindIII fragment (11.5 kilobases) that possessed three internal R.EcoRI targets and had inserted with the same orientation relative to the phage. A physical map of the fnr region was constructed by restriction analysis and flanking fragments were identified by DNA:DNA hybridization.