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1.
Temperate bacteriophage lytic development is intrinsically related to the stress response in particular at the DNA replication and virion maturation steps. Alternatively, temperate phages become lysogenic and integrate their genome into the host chromosome. Under stressful conditions, the prophage resumes a lytic development program, and the phage DNA is excised before being replicated. The KplE1 defective prophage of Escherichia coli K12 constitutes a model system because it is fully competent for integrative as well as excisive recombination and presents an atypical recombination module, which is conserved in various phage genomes. In this work, we identified the host-encoded stress-responsive molecular chaperone DnaJ (Hsp40) as an active participant in KplE1 prophage excision. We first show that the recombination directionality factor TorI of KplE1 specifically interacts with DnaJ. In addition, we found that DnaJ dramatically enhances both TorI binding to its DNA target and excisive recombination in vitro. Remarkably, such stimulatory effect by DnaJ was performed independently of its DnaK chaperone partner and did not require a functional DnaJ J-domain. Taken together, our results underline a novel and unsuspected functional interaction between the generic host stress-regulated chaperone and temperate bacteriophage lysogenic development.  相似文献   

2.
Temperate phages have the ability to maintain their genome in their host, a process called lysogeny. For most, passive replication of the phage genome relies on integration into the host''s chromosome and becoming a prophage. Prophages remain silent in the absence of stress and replicate passively within their host genome. However, when stressful conditions occur, a prophage excises itself and resumes the viral cycle. Integration and excision of phage genomes are mediated by regulated site-specific recombination catalyzed by tyrosine and serine recombinases. In the KplE1 prophage, site-specific recombination is mediated by the IntS integrase and the TorI recombination directionality factor (RDF). We previously described a sub-family of temperate phages that is characterized by an unusual organization of the recombination module. Consequently, the attL recombination region overlaps with the integrase promoter, and the integrase and RDF genes do not share a common activated promoter upon lytic induction as in the lambda prophage. In this study, we show that the intS gene is tightly regulated by its own product as well as by the TorI RDF protein. In silico analysis revealed that overlap of the attL region with the integrase promoter is widely encountered in prophages present in prokaryotic genomes, suggesting a general occurrence of negatively autoregulated integrase genes. The prediction that these integrase genes are negatively autoregulated was biologically assessed by studying the regulation of several integrase genes from two different Escherichia coli strains. Our results suggest that the majority of tRNA-associated integrase genes in prokaryotic genomes could be autoregulated and that this might be correlated with the recombination efficiency as in KplE1. The consequences of this unprecedented regulation for excisive recombination are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Integrative recombination between specific attachment (att) regions of the bacteriophage lambda genome (attP) and the Escherichia coli genome (attB) results in a prophage flanked by the hybrid recombinant sites attL and attR. Each att site contains sequences to which proteins involved in recombination bind. Using site-directed mutagenesis, we have constructed a related set of point mutations within each of the five Int "arm-type" binding sites located within attP, attL and attR. Footprint analyses of binding demonstrate that mutating the arm-type sites significantly disrupts the binding of Int. Recombination analyses of mutant att sites in vivo and in vitro demonstrate that only three wild-type arm-type sites within attP are required for efficient integrative recombination. Similar analyses demonstrate that efficient excision can occur with two other different sets of wild-type arm-type sites in attL and attR. These results demonstrate that integrative and excisive recombination may involve interactions of Int with distinct and different subsets of arm-type sites.  相似文献   

4.
Bacteriophage lambda integrase (Int) catalyzes site-specific recombination between pairs of attachment (att) sites. The att sites contain weak Int-binding sites called core-type sites that are separated by a 7-bp overlap region, where cleavage and strand exchange occur. We have characterized a number of mutant Int proteins with substitutions at positions S282 (S282A, S282F, and S282T), S286 (S286A, S286L, and S286T), and R293 (R293E, R293K, and R293Q). We investigated the core- and arm-binding properties and cooperativity of the mutant proteins, their ability to catalyze cleavage, and their ability to form and resolve Holliday junctions. Our kinetic analyses have identified synapsis as the rate-limiting step in excisive recombination. The IntS282 and IntS286 mutants show defects in synapsis in the bent-L and excisive pathways, respectively, while the IntR293 mutants exhibit synapsis defects in both the excision and bent-L pathways. The results of our study support earlier findings that the catalytic domain also serves a role in binding to core-type sites, that the core contacts made by this domain are important for both synapsis and catalysis, and that Int contacts core-type sites differently among the four recombination pathways. We speculate that these residues are important for the proper positioning of the catalytic residues involved in the recombination reaction and that their positions differ in the distinct nucleoprotein architectures formed during each pathway. Finally, we found that not all catalytic events in excision follow synapsis: the attL site probably undergoes several rounds of cleavage and ligation before it synapses and exchanges DNA with attR.  相似文献   

5.
Temperate phages mediate gene transfer and can modify the properties of their host organisms through the acquisition of novel genes, a process called lysogeny. The KplE1 prophage is one of the 10 prophage regions in Escherichia coli K12 MG1655. KplE1 is defective for lysis but fully competent for site-specific recombination. The TorI recombination directionality factor is strictly required for prophage excision from the host genome. We have previously shown that DnaJ promotes KplE1 excision by increasing the affinity of TorI for its site-specific recombination DNA target. Here, we provide evidence of a direct association between TorI and DnaJ using in vitro cross-linking assays and limited proteolysis experiments that show that this interaction allows both proteins to be transiently protected from trypsin digestion. Interestingly, NMR titration experiments showed that binding of DnaJ involves specific regions of the TorI structure. These regions, mainly composed of α-helices, are located on a surface opposite the DNA-binding site. Taken together, we propose that DnaJ, without the aid of DnaK/GrpE, is capable of increasing the efficiency of KplE1 excision by causing a conformational stabilization that allows TorI to adopt a more favorable conformation for binding to its specific DNA target.  相似文献   

6.
Bacteriophage C31 encodes an integrase, which acts on the phage and host attachment sites, attP and attB, to form an integrated prophage flanked by attL and attR. In the absence of accessory factors, C31 integrase cannot catalyse attL x attR recombination to excise the prophage. To understand the mechanism of directionality, mutant integrases were characterized that were active in excision. A hyperactive integrase, Int E449K, gained the ability to catalyse attL x attR, attL x attL and attR x attR recombination whilst retaining the ability to recombine attP x attB. A catalytically defective derivative of this mutant, Int S12A, E449K, could form stable complexes with attP/attB, attL/attR, attL/attL and attR/attR under conditions where Int S12A only complexed with attP/attB. Further analysis of the Int E449K-attL/attR synaptic events revealed a preference for one of the two predicted synapse structures with different orientations of the attL/attR sites. Several amino acid substitutions conferring hyperactivity, including E449K, were localized to one face of a predicted coiled-coil motif in the C-terminal domain. This work shows that a motif in the C-terminal domain of C31 integrase controls the formation of the synaptic interface in both integration and excision, possibly through a direct role in protein-protein interactions.  相似文献   

7.
The P2 Cox protein is known to repress the Pc promoter, which controls the expression of the P2 immunity repressor C. It has also been shown that Cox can activate the late promoter PLL of the unrelated phage P4. By this process, a P2 phage infecting a P4 lysogen is capable of inducing replication of the P4 genome, an example of viral transactivation. In this report, we present evidence that Cox is also directly involved in both prophage excision and phage integration. While purified Cox, in addition to P2 Int and Escherichia coli integration host factor, was required for attR x attL (excisive) recombination in vitro, it was inhibitory to attP x attB (integrative) recombination. The same amounts of Int and integration host factor which mediated optimal excisive recombination in vitro also mediated optimal integrative recombination. We quantified and compared the relative efficiencies of attB, attR, and attL in recombination with attP and discuss the functional implications of the results. DNase I protection experiments revealed an extended 70-bp Cox-protected region on the right arm of attP, centered at about +60 bp from the center of the core sequence. Gel shift assays suggest that there are two Cox binding sites within this region. Together, these data support the theory that in vivo, P2 can exert control over the direction of recombination by either expressing Int alone or Int and Cox together.  相似文献   

8.
A M Segall  H A Nash 《The EMBO journal》1993,12(12):4567-4576
Bacteriophage lambda uses site-specific recombination to move its DNA into and out of the Escherichia coli genome. The recombination event is mediated by the recombinase integrase (Int) together with several accessory proteins through short specific DNA sequences known as attachment sites. A gel mobility shift assay has been used to show that, in the absence of accessory proteins, Int can align and hold together two DNA molecules, each with an attachment site, to form stable non-covalent 'bimolecular complexes'. Each attachment site must have both core and arm binding sites for Int to participate in a bimolecular complex. These stable structures can be formed between pairs of attL and attP attachment sites, but cannot include attB or attR sites; they are inhibited by integration host factor (IHF) protein. The bimolecular complexes are shown to represent a synaptic intermediate in the reaction in which Int protein promotes the IHF-independent recombination of two attL sites. These complexes should enable a detailed analysis of synapsis for this pathway.  相似文献   

9.
The genome of the Streptomyces temperate phage phiC31 integrates into the host chromosome via a recombinase belonging to a novel group of phage integrases related to the resolvase/invertase enzymes. Previously, it was demonstrated that, in an in vitro recombination assay, phiC31 integrase catalyses integration (attP/attB recombination) but not excision (attL/attR). The mechanism responsible for this recombination site selectivity was therefore investigated. Purified integrase was shown to bind with similar apparent binding affinities to between 46 bp and 54 bp of DNA at each of the attachment sites, attP, attB, attL and attR. Assays using recombination sites of 50 bp and 51 bp for attP and attB, respectively, showed that these fragments were functional in attP/attB recombination and maintained strict site selectivity, i.e. no recombination between non-permissive sites, such as attP/attP, attB/attL, etc., was observed. Using bandshifts and supershift assays in which permissive and non-permissive combinations of att sites were used in the presence of integrase, only the attP/attB combination could generate supershifts. Recombination products were isolated from the supershifted complexes. It was concluded that these supershifted complexes contained the recombination synapse and that site specificity, and therefore directionality, is determined at the level of stable synapse formation.  相似文献   

10.
It has been previously demonstrated that the wild type integrase (Int) protein of coliphage HK022 can catalyze site-specific recombination in human cells between attachment (att) sites that were placed on extrachromosomal plasmids. In the present report it is shown that Int can catalyze the site-specific recombination reactions in a human cell culture on the chromosomal level. These include integrative (attP x attB) as well as excisive (attL x attR) reactions each in two configurations. In the cis configuration both sites are on the same chromosome, in the trans configuration one site is on a chromosome and the other on an episome. The reactions in cis were observed without any selection force, using the green fluorescent protein (GFP) as a reporter. The reactions in trans could be detected only when a selection force was applied, using the hygromycin-resistant (Hyg(R)) phenotype as a selective marker. All reactions were catalyzed without the need to supply any of the accessory proteins that are required by Int in its Escherichia coli host. The versatility of the att sites may be an advantage in the utilization of Int to integrate plasmid DNA into the genome, followed by a partial exclusion of the integrated plasmid.  相似文献   

11.
Temperate Myxococcus xanthus phage Mx8 integrates into the attB locus of the M. xanthus genome. The phage attachment site, attP, is required in cis for integration and lies within the int (integrase) coding sequence. Site-specific integration of Mx8 alters the 3' end of int to generate the modified intX gene, which encodes a less active form of integrase with a different C terminus. The phage-encoded (Int) form of integrase promotes attP x attB recombination more efficiently than attR x attB, attL x attB, or attB x attB recombination. The attP and attB sites share a common core. Sequences flanking both sides of the attP core within the int gene are necessary for attP function. This information shows that the directionality of the integration reaction depends on arm sequences flanking both sides of the attP core. Expression of the uoi gene immediately upstream of int inhibits integrative (attP x attB) recombination, supporting the idea that uoi encodes the Mx8 excisionase. Integrase catalyzes a reaction that alters the primary sequence of its gene; the change in the primary amino acid sequence of Mx8 integrase resulting from the reaction that it catalyzes is a novel mechanism by which the reversible, covalent modification of an enzyme is used to regulate its specific activity. The lower specific activity of the prophage-encoded IntX integrase acts to limit excisive site-specific recombination in lysogens carrying a single Mx8 prophage, which are less immune to superinfection than lysogens carrying multiple, tandem prophages. Thus, this mechanism serves to regulate Mx8 site-specific recombination and superinfection immunity coordinately and thereby to preserve the integrity of the lysogenic state.  相似文献   

12.
S E Nunes-Düby  L Matsumoto  A Landy 《Cell》1989,59(1):197-206
The early events in site-specific excisive recombination were studied with phage lambda half-att sites that have no DNA to one side of the strand exchange region; they carry a single core-type integrase binding site and either P or P' arm flanking DNA. These half-attR and half-attL sites exhibit normal properties for the initial (covalent) top-strand transfer and form stable intermediates independent of later steps in the reaction. With these novel substrates we show that Xis specifically promotes the first strand exchange and that attL enhances Int cleavage at the top-strand site of attR. It is also shown that synapsis and initial strand transfers do not require DNA-DNA pairing but are mediated by protein-protein and protein-DNA interactions. These involve the two top-strand Int binding sites (required for the first strand exchange) and, in addition, one of the two bottom-strand sites (C') responsible for the second strand exchange.  相似文献   

13.
The nucleotide sequence of the leftmost 2,363 base pairs of the HP1 genome, which includes the attachment site (attP) and the integration region, was determined. This sequence contained an open reading frame encoding a 337-residue polypeptide, which is a member of the integrase family of site-specific recombination proteins as judged by sequence comparison. The open reading frame was located immediately adjacent to the att site and was oriented so that initiation of translation would begin distal to the att site and end in its immediate vicinity. Expression of this DNA segment in Escherichia coli provided extracts which promoted site-specific recombination between plasmids containing cloned HP1 attP and Haemophilus influenzae attB sites. This recombination was directional, since no reaction was observed between plasmids containing attR and attL sites. The reaction was stimulated by the accessory protein integration host factor of E. coli. Evidence was also obtained that the integration host factor influenced the levels of HP1 integrase expression. The deduced amino acid sequence of HP1 integrase has remarkable similarity to that deduced for the integrase of coliphage 186.  相似文献   

14.
Excision of the lambda prophage from the chromosome of its Escherichia coli host requires the products of the two viral genes int and xis. This paper reports a purification of the lambda xis gene product using a complementation assay in which functional Xis must be added to purified Int and an E. coli-derived host factor extract. Excisive recombination between a left (attL) and right (attR) prophage attachment site cloned on the same plasmid DNA substrate occurred efficiently under these conditions. Purified Int and Xis together could not carry out excision in vitro unless an extract derived from the E. coli host was added; purified integration host factor satisfied this requirement. Xis appears to have a molecular weight of 8800 as determined by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate. It possesses no detectable endonuclease or topoisomerase activities, does not appear to bind DNA to filters, and does not increase the ability of Int to bind DNA. The addition of Xis not only stimulated excisive recombination in vitro but also inhibited integrative recombination. Xis protected Int protein from heat inactivation, suggesting a possible interaction between the two proteins. In light of these observations, possible roles for Xis in recombination are discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Plasmids were constructed which contain both attP and attB DNA segments derived from the insertion sites of the lysogenic bacteriophage HP1 and its host, Haemophilus influenzae. Similar plasmids containing the two junction segments (attL and attR regions) between the phage genome and the lysogenic host chromosome were also prepared. The formation of recombinant dimer plasmids was observed when attP-attB plasmids were propagated in Escherichia coli HB101 (recA), while plasmids containing the junction segments did not form recombinant dimers. Deletion of the phage DNA segment adjacent to the attP site from the attP-attB constructions eliminated detectable recombination, suggesting that this sequence contains the gene encoding the HP1 integrase. No plasmid recombination was observed in strains of E. coli defective in integration host factor. This suggests that integration host factor is important in the expression or activity of the system which produces the site-specific recombination of sequences derived from HP1 and H. influenzae. Further, it suggests that a protein functionally analogous to E. coli integration host factor may be present in H. influenzae.  相似文献   

16.
The activity of the Integrase (Int) protein encoded by coliphage HK022 was tested in a human cell culture. Plasmids were constructed as substrates that carry the sites of the integration reaction (attP and attB) or the sites of excision (attL and attR). The site-specific recombination reactions were monitored in cis and in trans configurations by the expression of the green fluorescent protein (GFP) as a reporter. Cells cotransfected with the substrate plasmid(s) and with a plasmid that expresses the wild-type Int show efficient integration as well as excision in both configurations. The wild-type Int was active in the human cells without the need to supply the accessory proteins integration host factor (IHF) and excisionase (Xis) that are indispensable for the reaction in the bacterial host.  相似文献   

17.
L W Black 《Gene》1986,46(1):97-101
Concatemeric phage lambda imm434 DNA packaged in vitro into phage T4 particles produced plaques on a selective host. Moreover, lambda DNA containing a pBR322 derivative flanked by the lambda attL and attR sites could be specifically recircularized by excisive lambda recombination to yield the pBR322 derivative. A host deficient in generalized recombination and containing a defective lambda c Its prophage which provided Int and Xis proteins was the recipient for this plasmid derivative carried by T4. Such a T4-lambda hybrid may potentially allow almost one T4 headful of donor DNA (166 kb) to be packaged and recircularized.  相似文献   

18.
Y W Han  R I Gumport    J F Gardner 《The EMBO journal》1993,12(12):4577-4584
Site-specific recombination of bacteriophage lambda starts with the formation of higher-order protein--DNA complexes, called 'intasomes', and is followed by a series of steps, including the initial DNA cleavage, top-strand exchange, branch migration and bottom-strand exchange, to produce recombinant products. One of the intasomes formed during excisive recombination (the attL complex) is composed of the phage-encoded integrase (Int), integration host factor (IHF) and one of the recombination substrates, attL DNA. Int is the catalytic recombinase and has two different DNA binding domains. When IHF is present, Int binds to two types of sites in attL DNA, the three arm-type sites (P'123) and the core-type sites (B and C') where the reciprocal strand exchange takes place. The Tyr342 residue of Int serves as a nucleophile during strand cleavage and covalently attaches to the DNA through a phosphotyrosyl bond. In vitro complementation assays have been performed for strand cleavage using attL suicide substrates and mutant proteins containing amino acid substitutions at residues conserved in the integrase family of recombinases. We demonstrate that at least two Int monomers are required to form the catalytically-competent species that performs cleavage at the B site. It is likely that the active site is formed by two Int monomers.  相似文献   

19.
Excision from the chromosome is the first step during the transfer of conjugative transposons (CTns) to a recipient. We previously showed that the excision of CTnDOT is more complex than the excision of lambdoid phages and CTns such as Tn916. The excision in vivo of CTnDOT utilizes four CTnDOT-encoded proteins, IntDOT, Xis2c, Xis2d, and Exc, and a host factor. We previously developed an in vitro excision reaction where the recombination sites attL and attR were located on different plasmids. The reaction was inefficient and did not require Exc, suggesting that the reaction conditions did not mimic in vivo conditions. Here, we report the development of an intramolecular excision reaction where the attL and attR sites are located on the same DNA molecule. We found that Exc stimulates the reaction 3- to 5-fold. The efficiency of the excision reaction was also dependent on the distance between the attL and attR sites and on the sequences of the overlap regions between the sites of the strand exchanges. Substrates with identical overlap sequences recombined more efficiently than ones with heterologous overlap sequences. This was surprising, because the integration reaction is not sensitive to heterology in the overlap regions of the attDOT and attB sites.  相似文献   

20.
The site-specific recombinase integrase encoded by bacteriophage lambda promotes integration and excision of the viral chromosome into and out of its Escherichia coli host chromosome through a Holliday junction recombination intermediate. This intermediate contains an integrase tetramer bound via its catalytic carboxyl-terminal domains to the four "core-type" sites of the Holliday junction DNA and via its amino-terminal domains to distal "arm-type" sites. The two classes of integrase binding sites are brought into close proximity by an ensemble of accessory proteins that bind and bend the intervening DNA. We have used a biotin interference assay that probes the requirement for major groove protein binding at specified DNA loci in conjunction with DNA protection, gel mobility shift, and genetic experiments to test several predictions of the models derived from the x-ray crystal structures of minimized and symmetrized surrogates of recombination intermediates lacking the accessory proteins and their cognate DNA targets. Our data do not support the predictions of "non-canonical" DNA targets for the N-domain of integrase, and they indicate that the complexes used for x-ray crystallography are more appropriate for modeling excisive rather than integrative recombination intermediates. We suggest that the difference in the asymmetric interaction profiles of the N-domains and arm-type sites in integrative versus excisive recombinogenic complexes reflects the regulation of recombination, whereas the asymmetry of these patterns within each reaction contributes to directionality.  相似文献   

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