RcGTA/Rhodobactegtaviriform (Rhodobacter capsulatus) The GTA produced by the
alphaproteobacterium Rhodobacter capsulatus, named
R. capsulatus GTA (RcGTA), is currently the best studied GTA. When laboratory cultures of
R. capsulatus enter stationary phase, a subset of the bacterial population induces production of RcGTA, and the particles are subsequently released from the cells through
cell lysis. Most of the RcGTA structural genes are encoded in a ~ 15 kb genetic cluster on the bacterial chromosome. However, other genes required for RcGTA function, such as the genes required for cell lysis, are located separately. RcGTA particles contain 4.5 kb DNA fragments, with even representation of the whole chromosome except for a 2-fold dip at the site of the RcGTA gene cluster. Regulation of GTA production and transduction has been best studied in
R. capsulatus, where a
quorum-sensing system and a CtrA-phosphorelay control expression of not only the main RcGTA gene cluster, but also a holin/endolysin cell lysis system, particle head spikes, an attachment protein (possibly tail fibers), and the capsule and DNA processing genes needed for RcGTA recipient function. An uncharacterized
stochastic process further limits expression of the gene cluster is to only 0.1-3% of the cells. RcGTA-like clusters are found in a large subclade of the
alphaproteobacteria, although the genes also appear to be frequently lost by deletion. Recently, several members of the order
Rhodobacterales have been demonstrated to produce functional RcGTA-like particles. Groups of genes with
homology to the RcGTA are present in the chromosomes of various types of alphaproteobacteria. However, its DNA packaging machinery has much more specificity, with sharp peaks and valleys of coverage suggestion that it may preferentially initiate packaging at specific sites in the genome. The DNA of the major DsGTA gene cluster is packaged very poorly.
BaGTA/Bartonegtaviriform (Bartonella species) Bartonella species are members of the Alphaproteobacteria like
R. capsulatus and
D. shibae, but
BaGTA is not related to RcGTA and DsGTA. BaGTA particles are larger than RcGTA and contain 14 kb DNA fragments. Although this capacity could in principle allow BaGTA to package and transmit its 14 kb GTA cluster, measurements of DNA coverage show reduced coverage of the cluster. An adjacent region of high coverage is thought to be due to local DNA replication.
VSH-1 (Brachyspira hyodysenteriae) Brachyspira is a genus of spirochete; several species have been shown to carry homologous GTA gene clusters. Particles contain 7.5 kb DNA fragments. Production of VSH-1 is stimulated by the DNA-damaging agent mitomycin C and by some antibiotics. It is also associated with detectable cell lysis, indicating that a substantial fraction of the culture may be producing VSH-1.
Dd1 (Desulfovibriondesulfuricans) D. desulfuricans is a soil bacterium in the deltaproteobacteria; Dd1 packages 13.6 kb of DNA fragments. It is unclear which genes encode for this GTA: there is one 17.8 kb area with phage-like structural genes in the bacterial genome, but their link to GTA production is not yet experimentally proven.
VTA (Methanococcus voltae) M. voltae is an archaean; its GTA is known to transfer 4.4 kb DNA fragments but has not been otherwise characterized, although a defective provirus related to
Methanococcus head-tailed viruses (
Caudoviricetes) in
M. voltae A3 genome has been suggested to represent the GTA locus. A possible
terL terminase () was again identified in 2019. == See also ==