A 5.6-kbp fragment of
Spiroplasma citri DNA containing the
dnaA gene has been cloned and sequenced. Nucleotide sequence analysis shows that this fragment harbors the genes for the replication initiator protein (
dnaA), the beta subunit of DNA polymerase III (
dnaN), and the DNA gyrase subunits A and B (
gyrA and
gyrB). The arrangement of these genes,
dnaA-
dnaN-
gyrB-
gyrA, is similar to that found in all Gram-positive bacterial genomes studied so far, except that no
recF gene was found between
dnaN and
gyrB. Several DnaA-box consensus sequences were found upstream of
dnaA and in the
dnaA-
dnaN intergenic region. The
dnaA region with the flanking DnaA-boxes and the tetracycline resistance determinant,
tetM, were linked into a circular recombinant DNA. This DNA was able to replicate autonomously when introduced by electroporation into
S. citri cells. These experiments show that the
dnaA region with the DnaA-boxes is the origin of replication of
S. citri and can be used to construct gene vectors.