首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Gene A protein, a bacteriophage phi X174-encoded endonuclease involved in phi X replicative form (RF) DNA replication, nicks not only phi X RFI DNA but also RFI DNAs of several other spherical single-stranded DNA bacteriophages. The position of the phi X gene A protein nick and the nucleotide sequence surrounding this site in RF DNAs of the bacteriophages U3, G14, and alpha 3 were determined. Comparison of the nucleotide sequences which surround the nick site of the gene A protein in RF DNAs of phi X174, G4, St-1, U3, G14, and alpha 3 revealed that a strongly conserved 30-nucleotide stretch occurred in RF DNAs of all six phages. However, perfect DNA sequence homology around this site was only 10 nucleotides, the decamer sequence CAACTTGATA. The present results support the hypothesis that, for nicking of double-stranded supercoiled DNA by the phi X gene A protein, the presence of the recognition sequence CAACTTGATA and a specific gene A protein binding sequence upstream from the recognition sequence are required. The sequence data obtained so far from phages U3, G14, St-1, and alpha 3 have been compared with the nucleotide sequences and amino acid sequences of both phi X and G4. According to this comparison, the evolutionary relationship between phages G4, U3, and G14 is very close, which also holds for phages alpha 3 and St-1. However, the two groups are only distantly related, both to each other and to phi X.  相似文献   

2.
The DNA sequence of 30 nucleotides which surrounds the origin of viral strand DNA replication is highly conserved amongst the icosahedral single-stranded DNA bacteriophages. The A gene of these phages encodes a protein which is required for initiation and termination of viral strand DNA synthesis and acts as a nicking-closing activity specifically within this 30-nucleotide sequence. A system of purified Escherichia coli host proteins and phi X174 gene A protein has been developed which specifically replicates in vitro the viral strand of phi X174 from RF (replicative form) I template DNA and yields single-stranded circular DNA products (RF leads to SS(c) DNA replication system). Recombinant plasmids carrying inserts derived from phage phi X174 or G4 DNA which range in length from 49 to 1175 base pairs and contain the 30-nucleotide conserved sequence have been shown to support phi X A protein-dependent DNA synthesis in vitro in this replication system. We report here that insertion of the 30-nucleotide sequence alone into pBR322 allows the resulting recombinant plasmids to support phi X A protein-dependent in vitro DNA synthesis as efficiently as phi X174 template DNA in the RF leads to SS(c) replication system. The 30-nucleotide sequence functions as a fully wild type DNA replication origin as determined by the rate of DNA synthesis and the structure of resulting DNA products. Furthermore, the DNA sequence requirements for nicking of RF I DNA by the phi X A protein and for supporting replication origin function have been partially separated. Homology to positions 1, 29, and 30 of the 30-nucleotide conserved sequence are not required for cleavage of RF I DNA by the A protein; homology to position 1 but not 29 or 30 is required for efficient DNA replication.  相似文献   

3.
Gene A protein of bacteriophage phi X174 plays a role as a site-specific endonuclease in the initiation and termination of phi X rolling circle DNA replication. To clarify the sequence requirements of this protein we have studied the cleavage of single-stranded restriction fragments from phi X and G4 viral DNAs using purified gene A protein. The results show that in both viral DNAs cleavage occurs at the origin and at one additional site which shows striking sequence homology with the origin region. During rolling circle replication the single-stranded viral DNA tail is covered with single-stranded DNA binding (SSB) protein. Therefore, we have also studied the effect of SSB on phi X gene A protein cleavage. In these conditions only single-stranded fragments containing the complete or almost complete origin region of 30 bases are cleaved, whereas cleavage at the additional sites of phi X or G4 viral DNAs does not occur. A model for termination of rolling circle replication which is based on these findings is presented. Finally, we present evidence that the second product of gene A, the A* protein, cleaves phi X viral DNA at the additional cleavage site in the presence of SSB, not only in vitro but also in vivo. The functional significance of this cleavage in vivo is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
The synthetic DNA fragment (formula, see text) (corresponding to nucleotides 4299-4314 of the phi X DNA sequence) was cloned into either the AmpR gene or the KmR gene of plasmid pACYC 177. The DNA sequence of the KmR gene around the insertion site was determined by nucleotide sequence analysis of the pACYC 177 FnudII restriction DNA fragment N6 (345 b.p.). Of five selected plasmid DNAs, which contained inserted DNA sequences in the antibiotic resistance genes, the nucleotide sequences at and around these insertions were determined. Two recombinant plasmids (pFH 704 and pFH 614) contain the hexadecamer sequence in tandem (tail-to-tail and tail-to-head). In the recombinant plasmids pFH 812, pFH 903 and pFH 807 the DNA sequence homology with the phi X origin region was 14 (No. 4300-4313), 16 (No. 4299-4314) and 20 nucleotides (No. 4299-4318), respectively. None of the supercoiled recombinant plasmid DNAs is nicked upon incubation with phi X gene A protein. Moreover, the recombinant plasmid RFI DNAs cannot act as substitutes for phi X RFI DNA in the in vitro (+) strand synthesizing system. It has been shown earlier that single-stranded DNA, which contains the decamer sequence CAACTTGATA is efficiently nicked by the phi X gene A protein. The present results indicate that for nicking of double-stranded supercoiled DNA nucleotide sequence homology with the phi X origin region of more than 20 nucleotides is required. These results suggest a model for initiation of phi X RF DNA replication, which involves the presence of the recognition sequence CAACTTGATA of the phi X gene A protein as well as a second specific nucleotide sequence which is required for the binding of the phi X gene A protein. This binding causes local unwinding of the DNA double helix and exposure of the recognition sequence in a single-stranded form, which then can be nicked by phi X gene A protein.  相似文献   

5.
The nuclease specificity of the bacteriophage phi X174 A* protein.   总被引:6,自引:3,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
The A* protein of bacteriophage phi X174 is a single-stranded DNA specific nuclease. It can cleave phi X viral ss DNA in many different places. The position of these sites have been determined within the known phi X174 nucleotide sequence (1). From the sequences at these sites it is clear that the A* protein recognizes and cleaves at sites that show only partial homology with the origin of RF DNA replication in the phi X DNA. Different parts of the origin sequence can be deduced that function as a signal for recognition and cleavage by the A* protein. We conclude that different parts within the DNA recognition domain of the A* protein are functional in the recognition of the origin sequence in single-stranded DNA. The existence of different DNA recognition domains in the A* protein, and therefore also in the A protein, leads to a model that can explain how the A protein performs its multiple function in the phi X174 DNA replication process (2).  相似文献   

6.
The insertion of a particular phi X DNA sequence in the plasmid pACYC177 strongly decreased the capacity of Escherichia coli cells containing such a plasmid to propagate bacteriophage phi X174. The smallest DNA sequence tested that showed the effect was the HindII fragment R4. This fragment does not code for a complete protein. It contains the sequence specifying the C-terminal part of the gene H protein and the N-terminal part of the gene A protein, as well as the noncoding region between these genes. Analysis of cells that contain plasmids with the "reduction sequence" showed that (i) the adsorption of the phages to the host cells is normal, (ii) in a single infection cycle much less phage is formed, (iii) only 10% of the infecting viral single-stranded DNA is converted to double-stranded replicative-form DNA, and (iv) less progeny replicative form DNA is synthesized. The reduction process is phi X174 specific, since the growth of the related G4 and St-1 phages was not affected in these cells. The effect of the recombinant plasmids on infecting phage DNA shows similarity to the process of superinfection exclusion.  相似文献   

7.
Recombinant RF (replicate form) I DNAs containing the bacteriophage phi X174 gene A protein-recognition sequence are cleaved by the phi X A protein yielding a phi X RF II X A protein complex (Zipursky, S.L., Reinberg, D., and Hurwitz, J. (1980) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 77, 5182-5186). Such complexes support DNA synthesis in both RF I leads to SS(c) and RF I leads to RF I phi X DNA replication reactions in vitro. Two phi X A protein-recognition sequences were inserted into plasmid pBR322. Both sequences were contiguous with the same strand of the vector DNA and separated by 667 and 4275 base pairs. This recombinant plasmid (G27-4) was cleaved by the phi X A protein at either insert and both inserts support the initiation of RF leads to SS(c) DNA synthesis. This was verified by the finding that replication products were circular molecules of 667 and 4275 nucleotides. This finding is in keeping with the multifunctional activities associated with the phi X A protein; these include the site-specific nicking of RF I DNA which initiates DNA synthesis and site-specific termination resulting in the circularization of the displaced DNA strand. The phi X A protein and the Escherichia coli rep and SSb proteins catalyze the unwinding of phi X RF I DNA in vitro (Scott, J.F., Eisenberg, S., Bertsch, L.L., and Kornberg, A. (1977) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 74, 193-197). Recombinant plasmid G27-4 RF I DNA was also unwound in vitro by this enzyme system; in this case, both circular and linear single-stranded DNA molecules of 667 and 4275 nucleotides, as well as full length circular single-stranded DNA were formed. Full length linear DNA was not detected. The two single-stranded circular DNA products formed as leading strands in RF leads to SS(c) reaction mixtures containing G27-4 RF I DNA differed in their ability to support lagging strand DNA synthesis. It was shown that the large single-stranded circular product included DNA sequences homologous to a replication factor Y effector sequence required for RF leads to RF and SS(c) leads to RF replication (Zipursky, S.L., and Marians, K.J. (1980) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 77, 6521-6525). The 4275-nucleotide, but not the 667-nucleotide, single-stranded circular DNA product was converted to a duplex structure.  相似文献   

8.
Functions of gene C and gene D products of bacteriophage phi X 174.   总被引:14,自引:6,他引:8       下载免费PDF全文
Phage-related materials existing in cells infected with various mutants of bacteriophage phi chi 174 were investigated. A novel species of replicative-form (RF) DNA was found in cells infected with a phage mutant of gene B, C, D, F, or G. This species, called RFI, sedimented at a position between RFI and RFII in a neutral sucrose gradient. It was converted to RFI upon denaturation in alkali, denaturation in formamide and subsequent renaturation, or RNase treatment at low ionic strength. In cells infected with a phage mutant of gene C, RFI was derived from pulse-labeled RFII after a short chase. TLLS INFECTED WITH A MUTANT OF GENE B, D, or F. A possible function of the C gene product of phi chi 174 could be to prevent the conversion of RFII to RFI, thereby maintaining the availability of RFII to act as the template for single-stranded viral DNA synthesis. A protein complex containing no DNA, which sedimented with an S value of 108 in a sucrose gradient and contained virion proteins F, G, and H, and nonvirion protein D, was found in cells infected with the gene C mutant. A possible function of protein D was considered as a scaffolding protein for assembly of phage structural proteins.  相似文献   

9.
Synthetic oligonucleotides, DNA ligase and DNA polymerase were used to construct double-stranded DNA fragments homologous to the first 25, 27 or 30 b.p. of the origin of replication of bacteriophage phi X174 (nucleotides 4299-4328 of the phi X174 DNA sequence). The double-stranded DNA fragments were cloned into the unique SmaI or HindIII restriction sites in the kanamycin-resistance gene of pACYC177 (AmpR, KmR). Recombinant plasmids were picked up by colony hybridization. DNA sequencing showed that not only recombinant plasmids with the expected insert were formed, but also recombinant plasmids with a shorter insert. Recombinant plasmids with an insert homologous to the first 24, 25, 26, 27, 28 or all 30 b.p. of the phi X174 origin region were thus obtained. Supercoiled plasmids containing a sequence homologous to the first 27, 28 or 30 b.p. of the phi X174 origin region are nicked by the phi X174 gene A protein. However, the other supercoiled plasmids are not nicked by the phi X174 gene A protein. These results show that the first 27 b.p. of the phi X174 origin region are sufficient as well as required for the initiation step in phi X174 RF DNA replication, i.e. the cleavage by gene A protein.  相似文献   

10.
The origin of replication of the isometric single-stranded DNA bacteriophages is located in a specific sequence of 30 nucleotides, the origin region, which is highly conserved in these phage genomes. Plasmids harboring this origin region are subject to rolling-circle DNA replication and packaging of single-stranded (ss) plasmid DNA into phage coats in phi X174 or G4-phage-infected cells. This system was used to study the nucleotide sequence requirements for rolling-circle DNA replication and DNA packaging employing plasmids which contain the first 24, 25, 26, 27, 28 and the complete 30-base-pair (bp) origin region of phi X174. No difference in plasmid ss DNA packaging was observed for plasmids carrying only the 30-bp origin region and plasmids carrying the 30-bp origin region plus surrounding sequences (i.e. plasmids carrying the HaeIII restriction fragment Z6B of phi X174 replicative-form DNA). This indicates that all signals for DNA replication and phage morphogenesis are contained in the 30-bp origin region and that no contribution is made by sequences which immediately surround the origin region in the phi X174 genome. The efficiency of packaging of plasmid ssDNA for plasmids containing deletions in the right part of the origin region decreases drastically when compared with the plasmid containing the complete 30-bp origin region (for a plasmid carrying the first 28 bp of the origin region to approximately 5% and 0.5% in the phi X174 and G4 systems respectively). Previous studies [Fluit, A.C., Baas, P.D., van Boom, J.H., Veeneman, G.H. and Jansz, H.S. (1984) Nucleic Acids Res. 12, 6443--6454] have shown that the presence of the first 27 bp of the origin region is necessary as well as sufficient for cleavage of the viral strand in the origin region by phi X174 gene A protein. Moreover, Brown et al. [Brown, D.R., Schmidt-Glenewinkel, T., Reinberg, D. and Hurwitz, J. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 8402--8412] have shown that omission of the last 2 bp of the origin region does not interfere with phi X174 rolling-circle DNA replication in vitro. Our results therefore suggest that for optimal phage development in vivo, signals in the origin region are utilized which have not yet been noticed by the in vitro systems for phi X174 phage DNA replication and morphogenesis.  相似文献   

11.
The phi X174 (phi X) gene A protein-mediated termination and reinitiation of single-stranded circular (SS(c] phi X viral DNA synthesis in vitro were directly and independently analyzed. Following incubation together with purified DNA replication enzymes from Escherichia coli, ATP, [alpha-32P]dNTPs, and either the phi X A protein and phi X replicative form I (RF I) DNA, or the purified RF II X A complex, the phi X A protein was detected covalently linked to newly synthesized 32P-labeled DNA. Formation of the phi X A protein-[32P]DNA covalent complex required all the factors necessary for phi X (+) SS(c) DNA synthesis in vitro. Thus, it was a product of the reinitiation reaction and an intermediate of the replication cycle. Identification of this complex provided direct evidence that reinitiation of phi X (+) strand DNA synthesis involved regeneration of the RF II X A complex. Substitution of 2',3'-dideoxyguanosine triphosphate (ddGTP) for dGTP in reaction mixtures resulted in the formation of covalent phi X A protein 32P-oligonucleotide complexes; these complexes were trapped analogues of the regenerated RF II X A complex. They could not act catalytically due to the presence of ddGMP residues at the 3'-termini of the oligonucleotide moieties. Reaction mixtures containing ddGTP also yielded nonradioactive (+) SS(c) DNA products derived from circularization of the displaced (+) strand of the input parental template DNA. The formation of the phi X A protein-32P-oligonucleotide complexes and nonradioactive (+) SS(c) DNA were used to assay both reinitiation and termination reactions, respectively. Both reactions required DNA synthesis from the 3'-hydroxyl primer at nucleotide residue 4305 which was formed by cleavage of phi X RF I DNA by the phi X A protein. Elongation of this primer by 18, but not 11 nucleotides was sufficient to support each reaction. Reinitiation reactions proceeded rapidly and were essentially complete after 90 s. In contrast, when ddGTP was replaced with dGTP in reaction mixtures, DNA synthesis proceeded with linear kinetics for up to 10 min. These results suggested that in the presence of all four dNTPs, active templates supported more than 40 rounds of DNA synthesis.  相似文献   

12.
The complete nucleotide sequence of the genome of the circular single-stranded DNA (isometric) phage alpha 3 has been determined and compared with that of the related phages phi X174 and G4. The alpha 3 genome consists of 6087 nucleotides, which is 701 nucleotides longer than the nucleotide sequence of the phi X174 genome and 510 nucleotides more than that of the G4 genome. The results demonstrated that the three phage species have 11 homologous genes (A, A*, B, C, K, D, E, J, F, G and H), the order of which is fundamentally identical, suggesting that they have evolved from a common ancestor. The sequence of some genes and untranslated intergenic regions, however, differs significantly from phage to phage: for example, the degree of amino acid sequence homology of the gene product is averaged at 47.7% between alpha 3 and phi X174 and 46.9% between alpha 3 and G4, and alpha 3 has a remarkable longer intergenic region composed of 758 nucleotides between the genes H and A compared with the counterparts of phi X174 and G4. Meanwhile, in vivo experiments of genetic complementation showed that alpha 3 can use none of the gene products of phi X174 and G4, whereas the related phage phi K can rescue alpha 3 nonsense mutants of the genes B, C, D and J. These sequencing and in vivo rescue results indicated that alpha 3 is closely related to phi K, but distantly remote from phi X174 or G4, and supported an evolutional hypothesis which has been so far proposed that the isometric phages are classified into three main groups: the generic representatives are phi X174, G4 and alpha 3.  相似文献   

13.
The purified A protein and A* protein of bacteriophage phi X174 have been tested for endonuclease activity on single stranded viral phi X174 DNA. The A protein (55.000 daltons) nicks single-stranded DNA in the same way and at the same place as it does superhelical RFI DNA, at the origin of DNA replication. The A* protein (37.000 daltons) can cleave the single-stranded viral DNA at many different sites. It has however a strong preference for the origin of replication. Both proteins generate 3'OH ends and blocked 5' termini at the nick site.  相似文献   

14.
Bacteriophage phi X174 encoded gene A protein is an enzyme required for initiation and termination of successive rounds of rolling circle phi X DNA replication. This enzyme catalyses cleavage and ligation of a phosphodiester bond between nucleotide residues G and A at the phi X origin. The cleavage reaction which occurs during initiation involves formation of a free GOH residue at one end and a covalent bond between tyrosine-OH of the gene A protein and 5' phosphate of the A residue, at the other end of the cleavage site. During termination the covalently bound gene A protein cleaves the phosphodiester bond between G and A at the regenerated origin and ligates the 3' and 5' ends of the displaced genome-length viral DNA to form a circle. Since tyrosyl-OH mediated rearrangements of phosphodiester bonds in DNA may also apply to other enzymes involved in replication or recombination such as topoisomerases we have studied this interesting mechanism in greater detail. Analysis of 32P-labelled gene A protein-DNA complex by tryptic digestion followed by sequencing of 32P-containing peptides showed that two tyrosyl residues in the repeating sequence tyr-val-ala-lys-tyr-val-asn-lys participate in phosphodiester bond cleavage. Either one of these tyrosyl residues can function as the acceptor of the DNA chain. In an alpha-helix the side chains of these tyrosyl residues are in juxtaposition. An enzymatic mechanism is proposed in which these two tyrosyl-OH groups participate in an alternating manner in successive cleavage and ligations which occur during phosphodiester bond rearrangements of DNA.  相似文献   

15.
The A* protein of phi X174 is an inhibitor of DNA replication   总被引:6,自引:1,他引:5       下载免费PDF全文
Extracts prepared from phi X174 infected E. coli cells inhibited in vitro RF replication The inhibition was dependent upon the presence of A* protein in the reaction and served as an assay to highly purify the A* protein. Purified A* protein bound tightly to duplex DNA as well as single-stranded DNA. The binding of the A* protein to duplex DNA inhibited (I) its single-stranded DNA specific endonucleolytic activity; (II) in vitro synthesis of viral (+) single stranded DNA on an A-RFII DNA complex template; (III) ATP hydrolysis by rep protein and unwinding of the strands of RF DNA. We propose that this inhibitory activity is responsible in vivo for the shut off of E. coli chromosome replication during phi X174 infection, and has a role in the transition from semiconservative RF DNA replication to single-stranded DNA synthesis in the life cycle of phi X174.  相似文献   

16.
Genes and regulatory sequences of bacteriophage phi X174   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Fragments of the DNA of bacteriophage phi X174 were inserted in the plasmids pACYC177 and pBR322, in order to test the in vivo effects of separate phage genes and regulatory sequences. The phi X174 inserts were identified by recombination and complementation with phage mutants, followed by restriction enzyme analysis. The genes B, C, F and G can be maintained stably in the cell even when there is efficient expression of these viral genes. Recombinant plasmids with the complete genes D and E can only be maintained when the expression of these genes is completely blocked. Expression of complete H and J genes could not yet be demonstrated. The intact gene A was apparently lethal for the host cell, as it was never found in the recombinants. The genes F and G are expressed, even when they are not preceded by one of the well characterized viral or plasmid promoter sequences. Screening of the nucleotide sequence of phi X174 gives two promoter-like sequences just in front of the two genes. Viral sequences with replication signals (the phi X174 (+) origin of replication, the initiation site for complementary strand synthesis and the incompatibility sequence) appeared to be functional also when inserted in recombinant plasmids. A plasmid with the phi X (+) origin can be forced to a rolling circle mode of replication. The A protein produced by infecting phages works in trans on the cloned viral origin. The (-) origin can function as initiation signal for complementary strand synthesis during transduction of single-stranded plasmid DNA. The intracellular presence of the incompatibility sequence on a plasmid prevents propagation of infecting phages.  相似文献   

17.
The simplest known origins of DNA replication occur in the single-stranded bacteriophages. In one set of phages, negative strand synthesis is initiated by a single protein, the product of the Escherichia coli replication gene dnaG. Evidently, in these phages--G4, St-1, phi K, and alpha 3--the origin for negative strand synthesis consists of a nucleic acid element capable of direct recognition by the dnaG priming protein. We have located and sequenced the origins of negative strand synthesis in St-1, phi K, and alpha 3, and compared them with the origin sequence previously determined for G4. In each case, the point at which the negative strand is initiated can be identified at the nucleotide level. The data lead to the following conclusions: 1. In all four phages, the negative strand initiation site occurs within an intercistronic region of approximately 135 bases. While in G4, the origin lies between genes specifying the viral coat proteins F and G, the origin is shifted in St-1, phi K, and alpha 3 to a position between coat protein genes G and H. 2. Extensive nucleotide conservation exists at the negative strand origin, but does not extend into the adjacent coding regions. The conserved origin DNA occurs in two regions, 42 and 45 bases long, which are separated by 13 bases of divergent sequence. 3. Correlated with the two stretches of conserved nucleotide sequence are two regions of potential secondary structure. The start point of negative strand synthesis lies just prior to one of these hairpins. Similarities in both primary sequence and secondary structure can be found between the negative strand origins of G4, St-1, phi K, and alpha 3 and the general origin regions of bacteriophage lambda and of E. coli.  相似文献   

18.
The influence of a C----G transversion at position 1 of the 30-base pair replication origin of bacteriophage phi X174 replicative form I DNA (phi X RFI) was examined in the RF----single-stranded circular DNA replication pathway catalyzed by the combined action of the purified phi X A protein, the Escherichia coli DNA polymerase III holoenzyme, rep helicase, and single-stranded DNA binding protein (Eisenberg, S., Scott, J.F., and Kornberg, A. (1976) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 73, 1594-1597; Reinberg, D., Zipursky, S.L., and Hurwitz, J. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 13143-13151). RFI DNA containing this transversion was cleaved to RFII by the phi X A protein as effectively as DNA containing the wild-type origin. The altered duplex DNA, however, supported replication at a slower rate (3- to 4-fold) than the wild-type DNA due to a defect in the termination and reinitiation reactions catalyzed by the phi X A protein. This defect resulted in the accumulation of DNA products containing long single strands covalently joined to the mutant DNA. These single strands were susceptible to nuclease S1 and exonuclease VII attack. The defect in the template DNA containing C----G transversion was not corrected when this mutant origin was placed on the same strand with a wild-type origin. This double-origin DNA was also replicated poorly and led to the accumulation of large products, in contrast to the products formed with RFI DNA containing two wild-type 30-base pair replication origins on the same strand.  相似文献   

19.
Mutational analysis of the bacteriophage phi X174 replication origin   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Bacteriophage phi X174 mutants within the 30 base-pair replication origin were constructed using oligodeoxynucleotide-directed mutagenesis. A total of 18 viable base substitution mutants at 13 different positions within the origin region were obtained. The majority of these ori mutants have a plaque morphology and burst size comparable to that of wild-type phi X174. Two phi X174 ori mutants with a reduced growth ability spontaneously acquired additional mutations that enhanced the growth rate. The additional mutation was located at the same site as the original mutation or was located in the N-terminal part of the gene A protein. This latter secondary mutation is responsible for a better binding and/or recognition of the gene A protein to the mutated origin. In a Darwinian experiment wild-type phi X174 outgrows all phi X174 ori mutants, indicating the superiority of the wild-type ori sequence for the reproduction of bacteriophage phi 174. Insertions and deletions were constructed at different positions within the phi X174 replication origin cloned in a plasmid. Small insertions and deletions in the A + T-rich spacer region do not inhibit phi X174 gene A protein cleavage in vitro, but severely impair packaging of single-stranded plasmid DNA in viral coats.  相似文献   

20.
The gene A protein of bacteriophage phi X 174 initiates replication of super-twisted RFI DNA by cleaving the viral (+) strand at the origin of replication and binding to the 5' end. Upon addition of E. coli rep protein (single-stranded DNA dependent ATPase), E. coli single-stranded DNA binding protein and ATP, complete unwinding of the two strands occurs. Electron microscopic analyses of intermediates in the reaction reveal that the unwinding occurs by movement of the 5' end into the duplex, displacing the viral strand in the form of a single-stranded loop. Since unwinding will not occur in the absence of either gene A protein or rep protein, it is presumed that the rep protein interacts to form a complex with the bound gene A protein. Single-stranded DNA binding protein facilitates the unwinding by binding to the exposed single-stranded DNA. Further addition of the four deoxyribotriphosphates and DNA polymerase III holoenzyme to the reaction results in synthesis of viral (+) single-stranded circles in amounts exceeding that of the input template. A model describing the role of gene A protein and rep protein in duplex DNA replication is presented and other properties of gene A protein discussed.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号