Apparent Involvement of a Plasmid in Phaseotoxin Production by Pseudomonas phaseolicola

Abstract
Three naturally occurring toxigenic strains (HB-36, G-50, and HB-33), one nontoxigenic strain (HB-20), and one ultraviolet light-induced toxinless mutant (G-50 Tox) of Pseudomonas phaseolicola were examined by dye-buoyant density equilibrium centrifugation for the presence of plasmid deoxyribonucleic acid. All strains contained plasmid deoxyribonucleic acid. Comparison of the plasmid deoxyribonucleic acid of different strains by agarose gel electrophoresis showed that strain G-50 harbored three plasmids, whereas the rest of the strains contained two plasmids each. Irrespective of their toxigenicity, all strains shared the large-sized first plasmid band, but differed with respect to other plasmids. Restriction endonuclease analyses of the plasmids indicated that a 22.50-megadalton plasmid was common to two of the toxigenic strains (HB-36 and G-50). However, strain HB-33, which is also toxigenic, contained a much smaller plasmid (4.23 megadaltons). It is hypothesized that this small plasmid may have arisen by a recombination event from a larger plasmid.