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1.
Mutants of bacteriophage T4D that are defective in genes 42 (dCMP hydroxymethylase), 46 (DNA exonuclease), and 56 (dCTPase) produce limited amounts of phage DNA in Escherichia coli B. In this DNA, glucoylated 5-hydroxymethylcytosine is completely replaced by cytosine. We found that this DNA rapidly becomes fragmented in vivo to at least 16 discrete bands as visualized on agarose gels subjected to electrophoresis. The sizes of the fragments ranged from more than 20 to less than 2 kilobase pairs. When DNAs from two of these bands were radioactively labeled in vitro by nick translation and hybridized to XbaI restriction fragments of cytosine-containing T4 DNA, evidence was obtained that the two bands are genetically distinct, i.e., they contain DNA from different parts of the T4 genome. Mutational inactivation of T4 endonuclease II (gene denA) prevented the fragmentation. Three different mutations in T4 endonuclease IV (gene denB) caused the same minor changes in the pattern of fragments. We conclude that T4 endonuclease II is required, and endonuclease IV is involved to a minor extent, in the in vivo production of these cytosine-containing T4 DNA fragments. We view these DNA fragments as "restriction fragments" since they represent degradation products of DNA "foreign" to T4, they are of discrete size, and they are genetically distinct. Thus, this report may represent the first, direct in vivo demonstration of discretely sized genetically distinct DNA restriction fragments.  相似文献   

2.
Regulation of Expression of Cloned Bacteriophage T4 Late Gene 23   总被引:5,自引:4,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
The parameters governing the activity of the cloned T4 gene 23, which codes for the major T4 head protein, were analyzed. Suppressor-negative bacteria carrying wild-type T4 gene 23 cloned into plasmid pCR1 or pBR322 were infected with T4 gene 23 amber phage also carrying mutations in the following genes: (i) denA and denB (to prevent breakdown of plasmid DNA after infection) and (ii) denA, denB, and, in addition, 56 (to generate newly replicated DNA containing dCMP) and alc/unf (because mutations in this last gene allow late genes to be expressed in cytosine-containing T4 DNA). Bacteria infected with these phage were labeled with (14)C-amino acids at various times after infection, and the labeled proteins were separated by one-dimensional gel electrophoresis so that the synthesis of plasmid-coded gp23 could be compared with the synthesis of other, chromosome-coded T4 late proteins. We analyzed the effects of additional mutations that inactivate DNA replication proteins (genes 32 and 43), an RNA polymerase-binding protein (gene 55), type II topoisomerase (gene 52), and an exonuclease function involved in recombination (gene 46) on the synthesis of plasmid-coded gp23 in relation to chromosome-coded T4 late proteins. In the denA:denB:56:alc/unf genetic background, the phage chromosome-borne late genes followed the same regulatory rules (with respect to DNA replication and gp55 action) as in the denA:denB genetic background. The plasmid-carried gene 23 was also under gp55 control, but was less sensitive than the chromosomal late genes to perturbations of DNA replication. Synthesis of plasmid-coded gp23 was greatly inhibited when both the type II T4 topoisomerase and the host's DNA gyrase are inactivated. Synthesis of gp23 was also substantially affected by a mutation in gene 46, but less strongly than in the denA:denB genetic background. These observations are interpreted as follows. The plasmid-borne T4 gene 23 is primarily expressed from a late promoter. Expression of gene 23 from this late promoter responds to an activation event which involves some structural alteration of DNA. In these respects, the requirements for expressing the plasmid-borne gene 23 and chromosomal late genes are very similar (although in the denA:denB:56:alc/unf genetic background, there are significant quantitative differences). For the plasmid-borne gene 23, activation involves the T4 gp46, a protein which is required for DNA recombination. However, for the reasons presented in the accompanying paper (Jacobs et al., J. Virol. 39:31-45, 1981), we conclude that the activation of gene 23 does not require a complete breakage-reunion event which transposes that gene to a later promoter on the phage chromosome. Ways in which gp46 may actually be involved in late promoter activation on the plasmid are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
A method was devised for identifying nonlethal mutants of T4 bacteriophage which lack the capacity to induce degradation of the deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) of their host, Escherichia coli. If a culture is infected in a medium containing hydroxyurea (HU), a compound that blocks de novo deoxyribonucleotide biosynthesis by interacting with ribonucleotide reductase, mutant phage that cannot establish the alternate pathway of deoxyribonucleotide production from bacterial DNA will fail to produce progeny. The progeny of 100 phages that survived heavy mutagenesis with hydroxylamine were tested for their ability to multiply in the presence of HU. Four of the cultures lacked this capacity. Cells infected with one of these mutants, designated T4nd28, accumulated double-stranded fragments of host DNA with a molecular weight of approximately 2 x 10(8) daltons. This mutant failed to induce T4 endonuclease II, an enzyme known to produce single-strand breaks in double-stranded cytosine-containing DNA. The properties of nd28 give strong support to an earlier suggestion that T4 endonuclease II participates in host DNA degradation. The nd28 mutation mapped between T4 genes 32 and 63 and was very close to the latter gene. It is, thus, in the region of the T4 map that is occupied by genes for a number of other enzymes, including deoxycytidylate deaminase, thymidylate synthetase, dihydrofolate reductase, and ribonucleotide reductase, that are nonessential to phage production in rich media.  相似文献   

4.
The deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) of Escherichia coli B is converted by colicin E2 to products soluble in cold trichloroacetic acid; we show that this DNA degradation (hereafter termed solubilization) is subject to inhibition by infection with bacteriophage T4. At least two modes of inhibition may be differentiated on the basis of their sensitivity to chloramphenicol. The following observations on the inhibition of E2 by phage T4 in the absence of chloramphenicol are described: (i) Simultaneous addition to E. coli B of E2 and a phage mutated in genes 42, 46, and 47 results in a virtually complete block of the DNA solubilization normally induced by E2; the mutation in gene 42 prevents phage DNA synthesis, and the mutations in genes 46 and 47 block a late stage of phage-induced solubilization of host DNA. (ii) This triple mutant inhibits equally well when added at any time during the E2-induced solubilization. (iii) Simultaneous addition to E. coli B of E2 and a phage mutated only in gene 42 results in extensive DNA solubilization, but the amount of residual acid-insoluble DNA (20 to 25%) is more characteristic of phage infection than of E2 addition (5% or less). (iv) denA mutants of phage T4 are blocked in an early stage (endonuclease II) of degradation of host DNA; when E2 and a phage mutated in both genes 42 and denA are added to E. coli B, extensive solubilization of DNA occurs with a pattern identical to that observed upon simultaneous addition of E2 and the gene 42 mutant. (v) However, delaying E2 addition for 10 min after infection by this double mutant allows the phage to develop considerable inhibition of E2. (vi) Adsorption of E2 to E. coli B is not impaired by infection with phage mutated in genes 42, 46, and 47. In the presence of chloramphenicol, the inhibition of E2 by the triple-mutant (genes 42, 46, and 47) still occurs, but to a lesser extent.  相似文献   

5.
Wild-type bacteriophage T4 was enriched for mutants which fail to degrade Escherichia coli deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) by the following method. E. coli B was labeled in DNA at high specific activity with tritiated thymidine ((3)H-dT) and infected at low multiplicity with unmutagenized T4D. At 25 min after infection, the culture was lysed and stored. Wild-type T4 degrades the host DNA and incorporates the (3)H-dT into the DNA of progeny phage; mutants which fail to degrade the host DNA make unlabeled progeny phage. Wild-type progeny are eventually inactivated by tritium decay; mutants survive. Such mutants were found at a frequency of about 1% in the survivors. Eight mutants are in a single complementation group called denA located near gene 63. Four of these mutants which were examined in detail leave the bulk of the host DNA in large fragments. All eight mutants exhibit much less than normal T4 endonuclease II activity. The mutants produce somewhat fewer phage and less DNA than does wild-type T4.  相似文献   

6.
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8.
We investigated the synthesis of DNA in toluene-treated cells prepared from Escherichia coli infected with bacteriophage T4. If the phage carry certain rII deletion mutations, those which extend into the nearby D2a region, the following results are obtained: (i) phage DNA synthesis occurs unless the phage carries certain DNA-negative mutations; and (ii) host DNA synthesis occurs even though the phage infection has already resulted in the cessation of host DNA synthesis in vivo. The latter result indicates that the phage-induced cessation of host DNA synthesis is not due to an irreversible inactivation of an essential component of the replication apparatus. If the phage are D2a(+), host DNA synthesis in toluene-treated infected cells is markedly reduced; phage DNA synthesis is probably also reduced somewhat. These D2a effects, considered along with our earlier work, suggest that a D2a-controlled nuclease, specific for cytosine-containing DNA, is active in toluene-treated cells.  相似文献   

9.
Nuclear disruption after infection of Escherichia coli with a bacteriophage T4 mutant deficient in the ability to induce endonuclease II indicates that either (i) the endonuclease II-catalyzed reaction is not the first step in host deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) breakdown or (ii) nuclear disruption is independent of nucleolytic cleavage of the host chromosome. M-band analysis demonstrates that the host DNA remains membrane-bound after infection with either an endonuclease II-deficient mutant or T4 phage ghosts.  相似文献   

10.
Escherichia coli cells infected with T4 phage which are deficient in both nuclear disruption and endonuclease II exhibit a pathway of host DNA degradation which does not occur in cells infected with phage deficient only in endonuclease II. This alternate pathway of host DNA degradation requires T4 endonuclease IV.  相似文献   

11.
Reciprocal three-factor crosses and the use of a partial revertant of a putative ribonucleotide reductase mutant of Escherichia coli B/5 as indicator have made it possible to map denA (deficient in endonuclease II) between nrd-11 (ribonucleotide reductase gene B) and amM69 (gene 63) on the bacteriophage T4 chromosome.  相似文献   

12.
Bacteriophage T4 cytosine-containing DNA is cleaved at a single site by the restriction endonuclease, Bam H1. The site lies within the late region of the T4 genome, close to, or within, gene 8, one of the structural genes of the phage particle baseplate.  相似文献   

13.
In bacterial strains containing the deoxyribonuclease endonuclease I (endonuclease I(+) strains), 70 to 80% of the injected superinfecting T-even phage deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) is rapidly degraded to oligonucleotides having an average chain length of 8, the same value as that obtained by endonuclease I digestion of purified T-even phage DNA in vitro. In endonuclease I(-) strains, less than 5% of the injected superinfecting T-even phage DNA is degraded to acid-soluble components. The superinfecting phage DNA is, however, fragmented into a large segment having a molecular weight of about 90 x 10(6) and 30 or more small acid-insoluble segments having molecular weights of less than 10(6). In both endonuclease I(+) and endonuclease I(-) strains, over 80% of the DNA from adsorbed primary T2 or T4 phage, but only 50% of the DNA from adsorbed superinfecting T2 or T4 phage, is injected. Superinfecting T4 are genetically excluded as efficiently from endonuclease I(-) strains as they are from endonuclease I(+) strains. The excluded phage cannot complement defects in either early or late gene functions carried by the primary phage. The induction of both superinfection breakdown and superinfection exclusion requires a period of protein synthesis between primary infection and addition of the superinfecting phage. These observations seem best explained by failure of superinfecting DNA to enter the host cell cytoplasm, presumably as a result of changes in the cell envelope induced by the primary phage.  相似文献   

14.
Plasmid pBR322 replication is inhibited after bacteriophage T4 infection. If no T4 DNA had been cloned into this plasmid vector, the kinetics of inhibition are similar to those observed for the inhibition of Escherichia coli chromosomal DNA. However, if T4 DNA has been cloned into pBR322, plasmid DNA synthesis is initially inhibited but then resumes approximately at the time that phage DNA replication begins. The T4 insert-dependent synthesis of pBR322 DNA is not observed if the infecting phage are deleted for the T4 DNA cloned in the plasmid. Thus, this T4 homology-dependent synthesis of plasmid DNA probably reflects recombination between plasmids and infecting phage genomes. However, this recombination-dependent synthesis of pBR322 DNA does not require the T4 gene 46 product, which is essential for T4 generalized recombination. The effect of T4 infection on the degradation of plasmid DNA is also examined. Plasmid DNA degradation, like E. coli chromosomal DNA degradation, occurs in wild-type and denB mutant infections. However, neither plasmid or chromosomal degradation can be detected in denA mutant infections by the method of DNA--DNA hybridization on nitrocellulose filters.  相似文献   

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17.
Endonuclease II-deficient, ligase-deficient double mutants of phage T4 induce considerably more deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) synthesis after infection of Escherichia coli B than does the ligase-deficient single mutant. Furthermore, the double mutant can replicate 10 to 15% as well as wild-type T4, whereas the single mutant fails to replicate. When the E. coli host is also deficient in ligase, the double mutant resembles the single mutant. The results indicate that host ligase can substitute for phage ligase when the host DNA is not attacked by the phage-induced endonuclease II.  相似文献   

18.
The shutoff of host DNA synthesis is delayed until about 8 to 10 min after infection when Escherichia coli B/5 cells were infected with bacteriophage T4 mutants deficient in the ability to induce nuclear disruption (ndd mutants). The host DNA synthesized after infection with ndd mutants is stable in the absence of T4 endonucleases II and IV, but is unstable in the presence of these nucleases. Host protein synthesis, as indicated by the inducibility of beta-galactosidase and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel patterns of isoptopically labeled proteins synthesize after infection, is shut off normally in ndd-infected cells, even in the absence of host DNA degradation. The Cal Tech wild-type strain of E. coli CT447 was found to restrict growth of the ndd mutants. Since T4D+ also has a very low efficiency of plating on CT447, we have isolated a nitrosoguanidine-induced derivative of CT447 which yields a high T4D+ efficiency of plating while still restricting the ndd mutants. Using this derivative, CT447 T4 plq+ (for T4 plaque+), we have shown that hos DNA degradation and shutoff of host DNA synthesis occur after infection with either ndd98 X 5 (shutoff delayed) or T4D+ (shutoff normal) with approximately the same kinetics as in E. coli strain B/5. Nuclear disruption occurs after infection of CT447 with ndd+ phage, but not after infection with ndd- phage. The rate of DNA synthesis after infection of CT447 T4 plq+ with ndd98 X 5 is about 75% of the rate observed after infection with T4D+ while the burst size of ndd98 X 5 is only 3.5% of that of T4D+. The results of gene dosage experiments using the ndd restrictive host C5447 suggest that the ndd gene product is required in stoichiometric amounts. The observation by thin-section electron microscopy of two distinct pools of DNA, one apparently phage DNA and the other host DNA, in cells infected with nuclear disruption may be a compartmentalization mechanism which separates the pathways of host DNA degradation and phage DNA biosynthesis.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Evidence for Heterogeneity in Populations of T5 Bacteriophage   总被引:7,自引:3,他引:4  
Each T5 stock contains a population of particular phages that, just after adsorption onto the host bacteria. release their entire chromosome outside the bacterial membrane in a place where it is sensitive to bacterial enzymes. This release takes place before the sensitization step to deprivation of calcium and before the transfer of the first-step DNA fragment. Secondarily, this released DNA is degraded by bacterial enzymes, mainly by the endonuclease I; the products of degradation are spontaneously released in the surrounding medium. Thus, in each T5 phage stock it seems that there is a minor population that is deficient for the mechanism of controlled DNA injection into the bacteria.  相似文献   

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