Some transposons, such as Tn10, excise from the
chromosome and integrate into the target
DNA. In these cases, DNA
replication of the element does not occur, and the element is lost from the site of the original chromosome. Researchers demonstrated this lack of replication by constructing heteroduplexes of λTn10 derivatives containing the
lac region of
E. coli. The researchers used DNA from Tn10-
lacZ+ and Tn10-
lacZ− derivatives. The heteroduplexes, therefore, contain one strand with the wild-type
lac region and a second strand with the mutated (
Z−)
lac region. diagrams this part of the experiment. The
heteroduplex DNA is used to infect cells that have no
lac genes, and transpositions of the Tet
R Tn10 are selected. Different types of colonies arise from the
transpositionof a heteroduplex
Z−/
Z+ carrying
transposon (). If replication takes place (the replicative
mode of transposition), all colonies are either completely Lac
+ or completely Lac
−, because the replication will convert the heteroduplex DNA into two homoduplex daughter molecules. The mechanism by which this conversion takes place will be examined in detail in the next section. However, if the transposition is conservative and does not include replication, each
colony arises from a
lacZ+/
lacZ− heteroduplex. Such colonies are partly Lac
+ and partly Lac
−. By using media that stain Lac
+ and Lac
− cells different colors, researchers can observe the Lac
+ and Lac
− sectors in colonies.
Therefore, the
determination of whether Tn10 undergoes replicative or conservative
transposition can be made by observing whether differently colored sectors exist within the same
colony resulting from the transposition. Sectored colonies are observed in a majority of cases (). Thus, Tn10—and perhaps other transposable elements in
E. coli—transpose by excising themselves from the
donor DNA and integrating directly into the recipient DNA.