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.
Martin L. Pato  Claudia Reich 《Cell》1984,36(1):197-202
The transposase of bacteriophage Mu (gene A protein) mediates the coupled replication and integration processes that constitute transposition during the lytic cycle. Our previous results showed that the activity of the A protein is unstable, as its continued synthesis is required to maintain Mu DNA replication throughout the lytic cycle. We present here the results of experiments in which the A protein is used stoichiometrically and must be synthesized de novo for each round of Mu DNA replication. Induction of a Mu lysogen in the absence of DNA replication allows accumulation of potential for a single round of Mu DNA replication. Once achieved, this potential is stable even in the absence of further protein synthesis. Release of inhibition of DNA replication leads to a single semi-conservative replicative transposition event, followed by later rounds only if additional synthesis of the A protein is allowed.  相似文献   

2.
Martin L. Pato  Claudia Reich 《Cell》1982,29(1):219-225
Transposition of genetic elements involves coupled replication and integration events catalyzed in part by a class of proteins called transposases. We have asked whether the transposase activity of bacteriophage Mu (the Mu A protein) is stable and capable of catalyzing multiple rounds of coupled replication/integration, or whether its continued synthesis is required to maintain Mu DNA replication. Inhibition of protein synthesis during the lytic cycle with chloramphenicol inhibited Mu DNA synthesis with a half-life of approximately 3 min, demonstrating a need for continued protein synthesis to maintain Mu DNA replication. Synthesis of specific Mu-encoded proteins was inhibited by infecting a host carrying a temperature-sensitive suppressor, at permissive temperature, with Mu amber phages, then shifting to nonpermissive temperature. When Aam phages were used, Mu DNA replication was inhibited with kinetics essentially identical to those with chloramphenicol addition; hence, it is likely that continued synthesis of the Mu A protein is required to maintain Mu DNA replication. The data suggest that the activity of the Mu A protein is unstable, and raise the possibility that the Mu A protein and other transposases may be used stoichiometrically rather than catalytically.  相似文献   

3.
Mobile genetic elements are a ubiquitous presence in the genomes of all well-studied organisms. The effect of genomic stress on the status and transposition of these elements has not, as yet, been extensively characterized. We have been using temperate, transposable bacteriophage Mu as a model system to examine the behavior of mobile genetic elements and have previously shown that many DNA-damaging agents did not induce a Mu prophage to enter the lytic cycle of multiple rounds of DNA transposition. To extend these results and to examine the possibility that they were a reflection of damage to the DNA substrate for Mu transposition, we have constructed a mini-Mu plasmid, pMD12, which contains the early region of Mu, flanked by both extremities required for transposition in cis, and the beginning of the transposase gene A fused in frame to the lacZ gene. This A'-lacZ fusion protein maintains beta-galactosidase enzymatic activity under the control of the expression of the Mu transposase A gene and thus, the capacity for Mu transposition can be easily monitored by assaying for beta-galactosidase. By measuring the amount of beta-galactosidase after various doses of gamma-irradiation, we found that doses of up to 75 krad had no effect on the expression of the Mu transposase gene A. This was confirmed by the lack of induction of a Mu prophage in strains containing a chromosomally inserted Mu genome. Although the plaque-forming units per colony-forming unit of strain CSH67, containing a chromosomally inserted lambda prophage, increased approximately 100-fold from 0 to 75 krad, no stimulation of induction of prophage Mu lytic growth was observed. We also found that plasmid pMD12 did not transpose and chromosomally associate upon gamma-irradiation. This supports the assertion that DNA-damaging agents, including gamma-rays, do not induce the transposition of prokaryotic mobile genetic elements.  相似文献   

4.
The bacteriophage Mu transposase (the Mu A gene product), which is absolutely required for both integration of Mu and replicative transposition during the lytic cycle, has been overproduced by cloning the gene on a plasmid under the control of the phage lambda PL promoter. The protein has been purified to near homogeneity from the lysate of heat-induced cells of a strain carrying the plasmid. The purified protein is active as judged by its ability to complement Mu A- cell extracts for supporting Mu transposition in a cell-free reaction.  相似文献   

5.
The Mu B protein is an ATP-dependent DNA-binding protein and an allosteric activator of the Mu transposase. As a result of these activities, Mu B is instrumental in efficient transposition and target-site choice. We analysed in vivo the role of Mu B in the two different recombination reactions performed by phage Mu: non-replicative transposition, the pathway used during integration, and replicative transposition, the pathway used during lytic growth. Utilizing a sensitive PCR-based assay for Mu transposition, we found that Mu B is not required for integration, but enhances the rate and extent of the process. Furthermore, three different mutant versions of Mu B, Mu BC99Y, Mu BK106A, and Mu B1-294, stimulate integration to a similar level as the wild-type protein. In contrast, these mutant proteins fail to support Mu growth. This deficiency is attributable to a defect in formation of an essential intermediate for replicative transposition. Biochemical analysis of the Mu B mutant proteins reveals common features: the mutants retain the ability to stimulate transposase, but are defective in DNA binding and target DNA delivery. These data indicate that activation of transposase by Mu B is sufficient for robust non-replicative transposition. Efficient replicative transposition, however, demands that the Mu B protein not only activate transposase, but also bind and deliver the target DNA.  相似文献   

6.
The MuA transposase mediates transposition of bacteriophage Mu through two distinct mechanisms. The first integration event following infection occurs through a non-replicative mechanism. In contrast, during lytic growth, multiple rounds of replicative transposition amplify the phage genome. We have examined the influence of gyrase and DNA supercoiling on these two transposition pathways using both a gyrase-inhibiting drug and several distinct gyrase mutants. These experiments reveal that gyrase activity is not essential for integration; both lysogens and recombination intermediates are detected when gyrase is inhibited during Mu infection. In contrast, gyrase inhibition causes severe defects in replicative transposition. In two of the mutants, as well as in drug-treated cells, replicative transposition is almost completely blocked. Experiments probing for formation of MuA-DNA complexes in vivo reveal that this block occurs very early, during assembly of the transposase complex required for the catalytic steps of recombination. The findings establish that DNA structure-based signals are used differently for integrative and replicative transposition. We propose that transposase assembly, the committed step for recombination, has evolved to depend on different DNA /architectural signals to control the reaction outcome during these two distinct phases of the phage life cycle.  相似文献   

7.
We have previously reported that the 13 kDa amino terminus of the 70 kDa bacteriophage D108 transposase protein (A gene product) contains a two-component, sequence-specific DNA-binding domain which specifically binds to the related bacteriophage Mu's right end (attR) in vitro. To extend these studies, we examined the ability of the 13 kDa amino terminus of the Mu transposase protein to bind specifically to Mu attR in crude extracts. Here we report that the Mu transposase protein also contains a Mu attR specific DNA-binding domain, located in a putative alpha-helix-turn-alpha-helix region, in the amino terminal 13 kDa portion of the 70 kDa transposase protein as part of a 23 kDa fusion protein with beta-lactamase. We purified for this attR-specific DNA-binding activity and ultimately obtained a single polypeptide of the predicted molecular weight for the A'--'bla fusion protein. We found that the pure protein bound to the Mu attR site in a different manner compared with the entire Mu transposase protein as determined by DNase I-footprinting. Our results may suggest the presence of a potential primordial DNA-binding site (5'-PuCGAAA-3') located several times within attR, at the ends of Mu and D108 DNA, and at the extremities of other prokaryotic class II elements that catalyze 5 base pair duplications at the site of element insertion. The dissection of the functional domains of the related phage Mu and D108 transposase proteins will provide clues to the mechanisms and evolution of DNA transposition as a mode of mobile genetic element propagation.  相似文献   

8.
Induction of a Mu prophage in Escherichia coli Hfr strains lyosgenic for Mu cts62 leads to the generation of F' episomes. Each episome thus formed carries at least one copy of the Mu genome. These results suggest that integration of Mu is mandatory for the formation of the heterogeneous circles during the lytic cycle. The circles may be precursors for phage maturation.  相似文献   

9.
Bacteriophage Mu transposition requires two phage-encoded proteins, the transposase, Mu A, and an accessory protein, Mu B. Mu B is an ATP-dependent DNA-binding protein that is required for target capture and target immunity and is an allosteric activator of transpososome function. The recent NMR structure of the C-terminal domain of Mu B (Mu B223-312) revealed that there is a patch of positively charged residues on the solvent-exposed surface. This patch may be responsible for the nonspecific DNA binding activity displayed by the purified Mu B223-312 peptide. We show that mutations of three lysine residues within this patch completely abolish nonspecific DNA binding of the C-terminal peptide (Mu B223- 312). To determine how this DNA binding activity affects transposition we mutated these lysine residues in the full-length protein. The full-length protein carrying all three mutations was deficient in both strand transfer and allosteric activation of transpososome function but retained ATPase activity. Peptide binding studies also revealed that this patch of basic residues within the C-terminal domain of Mu B is within a region of the protein that interacts directly with Mu A. Thus, we conclude that this protein segment contributes to both DNA binding and protein-protein contacts with the Mu transposase.  相似文献   

10.
We have generated a series of 3' deletions of a cloned copy of the bacteriophage Mu transposase (A) gene. The corresponding truncated proteins, expressed under the control of the lambda PI promoter, were analysed in vivo for their capacity to complement a super-infecting MuAam phage, both for lytic growth and lysogeny, and for their effect on growth of wild-type Mu following infection or induction of a lysogen. Using crude cell extracts, we have also examined binding properties of these proteins to the ends of Mu. The results allow us to further define regions of the protein important in replicative transposition, establishment of lysogeny and DNA binding.  相似文献   

11.
Z Wu  G Chaconas 《The EMBO journal》1995,14(15):3835-3843
The Mu A protein is a 75 kDa transposase organized into three structural domains. By severing the C-terminal region (domain III) from the remainder of the protein, we unmasked a novel non-specific DNA binding and nuclease activity in this region. Deletion analysis localized both activities to a 26 amino acid stretch (aa 575-600) which remarkably remained active in DNA binding and cleavage. The two activities were shown to be tightly linked by site-directed mutagenesis. To study the importance of these activities in the transposition process, an intact mutant transposase lacking the DNA binding and nuclease activity of domain III was constructed and purified. The mutant transposase was indistinguishable from wild-type Mu A in binding affinity for both the Mu ends and the enhancer, and in strand transfer activity when the cleavage step was bypassed. In contrast, the mutant transposase displayed defects in both synapsis and donor cleavage. Our results strongly suggest that the 26 amino acid region in domain III carries catalytic residues required for donor DNA cleavage by Mu A protein. Furthermore, our data suggest that an active site for donor cleavage activity in the Mu tetramer is assembled from domain II (metal ion binding) in one A monomer and domain III (DNA cleavage) in a separate A monomer. This proposal for active site assembly is in agreement with the recently proposed domain sharing model by Yang et al. (Yang, J.Y., Kim, K., Jayaram, M. and Harshey, R.M. [1995] EMBO J., 14, 2374-2384).  相似文献   

12.
M Faelen  M J Gama  A Toussaint 《Biochimie》1990,72(9):697-701
We show that a mutation in bacteriophage Mu transposase (pA) which was isolated as a deletion of the C-terminal end of the protein actually consists of the replacement of the last 16 amino acids (which are mostly hydrophilic) by 26 mostly hydrophobic amino acids. This change almost completely inactivates the in vivo enzyme activity as well as its capacity to bind Mu ends in vitro, although the end-binding domain of the protein resides at least 150 amino acids from the C-terminus. This sharply contrasts with the properties of a series of missense mutations and short C-terminal deletions in pA described earlier which only slightly decrease the overall transposase activity.  相似文献   

13.
A study of the properties of deletion mutants at the 3’ end ofA, the gene encoding the transposase protein of phage Mu, shows that the mutants are defective in the high-frequency non-replicative transposition observed early after Mu infection as well as the high-frequency replicative transposition observed during Mu lytic growth. They show near-normal levels of lysogenization, low frequency transposition and precise excision. The mutants behave as if they are “blind” to the presence of Mu B, a protein whose function is essential for the high frequency of both replicative and non-replicative Mudna transposition. We have sequenced these deletion mutants as well as the amber mutant A 7110 which is known to be defective in replicative transposition.A 7110 maps at the 3’ end of geneA. We suggest that the carboxyl-terminal region of the A-protein is involved in protein-protein interactions, especially with the B-protein. We also show in this study that mutations upstream of the Shine-Dalgarno sequence of geneA and within the preceding genener, perturb the synthesis of A-protein and that higher levels of A-protein cause an inhibition ofA activity.  相似文献   

14.
The 663 amino acid Mu transposase protein is absolutely required for Mu DNA transposition. Mutant proteins were constructed in vitro in order to locate regions of transposase that may be important for the catalysis of DNA transposition. Deletions in the A gene, which encodes the transposase, yielded two stable mutant proteins that aid in defining the end-specific DNA-binding domain. Linker insertion mutagenesis at eight sites in the Mu A gene generated two proteins, FF6 and FF14 (resulting from two and four amino acid insertions, respectively, at position 408), which were thermolabile for DNA binding in vitro at 43°C. However, transposition activity in vivo was severely reduced for all mutant proteins at 37°C, except those with insertions at positions 328 and 624. In addition, site-specific mutagenesis was performed to alter tyrosine 414, which is situated in a region that displays amino acid homology to the active sites of a number of nicking/closing enzymes. Tyrosine 414 may reside within an important, yet non-essential, site of transposase, as an aspartate-substituted protein had a drastically reduced frequency of transposition, while the remaining mutants yielded reduced, but substantial, frequencies of Mu transposition in vivo.  相似文献   

15.
The 37 kb transposable bacteriophage Mu genome encodes a transposase protein which can recognize and bind to a consensus sequence repeated three times at each extremity of its genome. A subset of this consensus sequence (5'-PuCGAAA(A)-3') is found in the ends of many class II prokaryotic transposable elements. These elements, like phage Mu, cause 5 bp duplications at the site of element insertion, and transpose by a cointegrate mechanism. Using the band retardation assay, we have found that crude protein extracts containing overexpressed Mu transposase can form high-affinity protein-DNA complexes with Mu att R and the ends of the class II elements Tn 3 (right) and IS101. No significant protein-DNA complex formation was observed with DNA fragments containing the right end of the element IS102, or a non-specific pBR322 fragment of similar size. These results suggest that the Mu transposase protein can specifically recognize the ends of other class II transposable elements and that these elements may be evolutionarily related.  相似文献   

16.
17.
M Mizuuchi  K Mizuuchi 《The EMBO journal》2001,20(23):6927-6935
Initiation of phage Mu DNA transposition requires assembly of higher order protein-DNA complexes called Mu transpososomes containing the two Mu DNA ends and MuA transposase tetramer. Mu transpososome assembly is highly regulated and involves multiple DNA sites for transposase binding, including a transpositional enhancer called the internal activation sequence (IAS). In addition, a number of protein cofactors participate, including the target DNA activator MuB ATPase. We investigated the impact of the assembly cofactors on the kinetics of transpososome assembly with the aim of deciphering the reaction steps that are influenced by the cofactors. The transpositional enhancer IAS appears to have little impact on the initial pairing of the two Mu end segments bound by MuA. Instead, it accelerates the post-synaptic conformational step(s) that converts the reversible complex to the stable transpososome. The transpososome assembly stimulation by MuB does not require its stable DNA binding activity, which appears critical for directing transposition to sites distant from the donor transposon.  相似文献   

18.
We examined several aspects of bacteriophage Mu development in Escherichia coli strains that carry mutations in the polA structural gene for DNA polymerase I (PolI). We found that polA mutants were markedly less efficient than PolI wild-type (PolI+) strains in their capacity to form stable Mu lysogens and to support normal lytic growth of phage Mu. The frequency of lysogenization was determined for polA mutants and their isogenic PolI+ derivatives, with the result that mutants were lysogenized 3 to 8 times less frequently than were PolI+ cells. In one-step growth experiments, we found that phage Mu grew less efficiently in polA cells than in PolI+ cells, as evidenced by a 50 to 100% increase in the latent period and a 20 to 40% decrease in mean burst size in mutant cells. A further difference noted in infected polA strains was a 10-fold reduction in the frequency of Mu-mediated transposition of chromosomal genes to an F plasmid. Pulse labeling and DNA-DNA hybridization assays to measure the rate of phage Mu DNA synthesis after the induction of thermosensitive prophages indicated that phage Mu replication began at about the same time in both polA and PolI+ strains, but proceeded at a slower rate in polA cells. We conclude that PolI is normally involved in the replication and integration of phage Mu. However, since phage Mu does not exhibit an absolute requirement for normal levels of PolI, it appears that residual PolI activity in the mutant strains, other cellular enzymes, or both can partially compensate for the absence of normal PolI activity.  相似文献   

19.
We show, using gel retardation, that crude Escherichia coli cell extracts contain a protein which binds specifically to DNA fragments carrying either end of the phage Mu genome. We have identified this protein as Fis, a factor involved in several site-specific recombinational switches. Furthermore, we show that induction of a Mucts62 prophage in a fis lysogen occurs at a lower temperature than that of a wild-type strain, and that spontaneous induction of Mucts62 is increased in the fis mutant. DNasel footprinting using either crude extracts or purified Fis indicate that binding on the left end of Mu occurs at a site which overlaps a weak transposase binding site. Thus, Fis may modulate Mu growth by influencing the binding of transposase, or other proteins, to the transposase binding site(s), in a way similar to its influence on Xis binding in phage lambda.  相似文献   

20.
Events following prophage Mu induction.   总被引:13,自引:2,他引:11       下载免费PDF全文
Escherichia coli strains lysogenic for a thermoinducible Mu prophage (Mu cts62) undergo rapid lysis about 50 min after heat induction. Induction of Mu cts62 apparently causes damage to the host sequences in which Mu is inserted. The normal expression of A, BU, and X genes of Mu is needed for this specific deleterious effect on the prophage-containing host sequences. Mu deoxyribonucleic acid can be shown to reintegrate extensively at different sites on the host genome during the lytic cycle after prophage induction or after infection of sensitive cells by clear-plaque mutants of Mu. We estimate that approximately 10 copies of Mu deoxyribonucleic acid are inserted per chromosome during vegetative growth. The episome rescue method for detecting vegetative Mu deoxyribonucleic acid insertion, in which an episome is transferred from the lytically infected cells to F- receipient cells, can be applied to study Mu integration without requiring the host cells to survive. It also provides an easy system to isolate Mu insertions in transmissible episomes and plasmids.  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