RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Rearrangement of the bacterial chromosome: forbidden inversions JF Science JO Science FD American Association for the Advancement of Science SP 1314 OP 1318 DO 10.1126/science.3045970 VO 241 IS 4871 A1 Segall, A A1 Mahan, MJ A1 Roth, JR YR 1988 UL http://science.sciencemag.org/content/241/4871/1314.abstract AB The order of genes in the chromosome of enteric bacteria has been evolutionarily conserved despite the existence of mechanisms for rearrangement. Homologous chromosomal sequences in the same orientation recombine to form deletions or duplications. When homologous sequences in inverse orientation recombine, one expects to form an inversion of the intervening chromosomal segment. This expectation was tested by placing pairs of homologous sequences in inverse order at various points in the chromosome. Sequences at many pairs of sites (permissive) do recombine to generate the expected inversion, while the same sequences placed at other pairs of sites (nonpermissive) do not form an inversion. For the one nonpermissive interval tested, the missing inversion type can be constructed by an alternative transductional method; strains with this inversion are viable. Thus mechanistic limitations must prevent sequences at particular sites from undergoing the recombination event required to form an inversion.