Genomic Changes Arising in Long-Term Stab Cultures of Escherichia coli

2004 
Genomic scans of clones isolated from long-term stab cultures of Escherichia coli K-12 showed the loss of two large segments of the genome, with each lost segment being approximately 20 kb long. A detailed analysis of one of the deletions, located between 5.4 and 5.9 min, revealed that similar deletions had arisen in several other stab cultures. All deletions of this type exhibited a right terminus ending precisely at an IS 5A element and a left terminus that varied over an ∼5-kb range but was bordered in all but two cases by sequences belonging to the preferred consensus target sequence for IS 5 , YTAR. The ubiquity of such deletions in independent stab cultures and the increase in their frequency over time argue that they have a selective advantage. It is speculated that the loss of the crl locus is responsible for the selective advantage of the deletions.
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