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1.
We have found that two different temperature-sensitive mutations in gene 22, tsA74 and ts22-2, produce high frequencies (up to 85%) of petite phage particles when grown at a permissive or intermediate temperature. Moreover, the ratio of petite to normal particles in a lysate depends upon the temperature at which the phage are grown. These petite phage particles appear to have approximately isometric heads when viewed in the electron microscope, and can be distinguished from normal particles by their sedimentation coefficient and by their buoyant density in CsCl. They are biologically active as detected by their ability to complement a co-infecting amber helper phage. Lysates of both mutants grown at a permissive temperature reveal not only a significant number of petite phage particles in the electron microscope, but also sizeable classes of wider-than-normal particles, particles having abnormally attached tails, and others having more than one tail.Striking protein differences exist between the purified phage particles of tsA74 or ts22-2 and wild-type T4. B11, a 61,000 molecular weight head protein, is completely absent from the phage particles of both mutants, and the internal protein IPIII1 is present in reduced amounts as compared to wild type. The precursor to B11 is present in the lysates, but these mutations appear to prevent its incorporation into heads, so it does not become cleaved.The product of gene 22 (P22) is known to be the major protein of the morphogenetic core of the T4 head. Besides the mutations reported here, several mutations which affect head length have been found in gene 23, which codes for the major capsid protein (Doermann et al., 1973b). We suggest a model in which head length is determined by an interaction between the core (P22 and IPIII) and the outer shell (P23).  相似文献   

2.
The phenotypic characteristics of 26 ptg mutations in T4 gene 23 are described. All were located in three tight clusters in that gene and, by definition of ptg mutations, all produced giant phage. Intermediate petite phage, which invariably made up a substantial fraction of the progeny of these mutants, appeared to be a unique product of gene 23 mutations. Isometric petite phage were produced in significant numbers by strains with mutations at only 4 of the 10 sites identified with the PTG phenotype. The data presented indicate that there was little if any variation in the lengths of the normal, the intermediate petite, and the isometric petite classes. The frequencies of those capsid types were fairly specific for the individual mutations. The giant capsids that resulted from ptg mutations also had characteristic length distributions, of which three types were distinguished. These highly specific effects of gene 23 ptg mutations on capsid length regulation of T4 imply that the product of gene 23, gp23, plays a significant role in controlling the length of its capsid. The restrictions these observations place on a model for T4 capsid length regulation are discussed briefly.  相似文献   

3.
The T4 gene 23 product (gp23) encodes the major structural protein of the mature capsid. Mutations in this gene have been described which disrupt the normal length-determining mechanism (A.H. Doermann, F.A. Eiserling, and L. Boehner, J. Virol. 12:374-385, 1973). Mutants which produce high levels of petite and giant phage (ptg) are restricted to three tight clusters in gene 23 (A.H. Doermann, A. Pao, and P. Jackson, J. Virol. 61:2823-2827, 1987). Twenty-six of these ptg mutations were cloned, and their DNA sequence alterations were determined. Each member of this set of ptg mutants arose from a single mutation, and the set defined 10 different sites at which ptg mutations can occur in gene 23. Two petite (pt) mutations in gene 23 (pt21-34 and ptE920g), which produce high frequencies of petite particles but no giants, were also sequenced. Both pt21-34 and ptE920g were shown to include multiple mutations. The phenotypes attributed to both pt and ptg mutations are discussed relative to the mechanism of capsid morphogenesis. A site-directed mutation (SD-1E) was created at the ptgNg191 site, and its phenotypic consequences were examined. Plaque morphology revertants arising from a gene 23 mutant derivative of pt21-34 and from SD-1E were isolated. A preliminary mapping of the mutation(s) responsible for their revertant phenotypes suggested that both intra- and extragenic suppressors of the petite phenotype can be isolated by this method.  相似文献   

4.
The rate of production of tandem duplications in phage λ has been measured in the presence and absence of known recombination systems. Two deletion phages have been used: tdel33, a deletion derivative of a φ80-λ hybrid phage, and λb221, which carries a large deletion of the central portion of the λ chromosome. Both phages are int, and tdel33 is also red, by virtue of their deletions. Stocks of these phages can be prepared free of long tandem duplication derivatives by CsCl density gradient purification. After a single cycle of lytic growth, lysates from these purified phage stocks contain tandem duplications at a frequency of 10−3 in the case of tdel33 and 10−5 in the case of λb221. These frequencies are unaffected by the presence of mutations in the host Rec system or the phage Red system. To investigate the difference in duplication frequency between tdel33 and λb221, the phages were grown in mixed infection. The result indicates that a trans-active product of tdel33 is responsible for its high frequency of duplication production.Tandem duplications have been detected by banding the phage lysates in CsCl density gradients. Long DNA addition mutants can be detected in this way if they arise with a frequency of at least 10−5 and if the duplication length is at least 0.14 λ lengths. To accomplish this it is necessary to distinguish them from contaminating parental phage and from dense phages with aberrant structures which arise at roughly comparable frequencies. The former can be done by rebanding and the latter by growth and rebanding. To distinguish these types we have also made use of a new mutant of Escherichia coli which does not plate λ deletion phages. All of the DNA addition mutants we have detected in this way are tandem duplications; evidently mutants with long insertions arise more rarely.  相似文献   

5.
The functions of ten known late genes are required for the intracellular assembly of infectious particles of the temperate Salmonella phage P22. The defective phenotypes of mutants in these genes have been characterized with respect to DNA metabolism and the appearance of phage-related structures in lysates of infected cells. In addition, proteins specified by eight of the ten late genes were identified by sodium dodecyl sulfate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis; all but two are found in the mature phage particle. We do not find cleavage of these proteins during morphogenesis.The mutants fall into two classes with respect to DNA maturation; cells infected with mutants of genes 5, 8, 1, 2 and 3 accumulate DNA as a rapidly sedimenting complex containing strands longer than mature phage length. 5? and 8? lysates contain few phage-related structures. Gene 5 specifies the major head structural protein; gene 8 specifies the major protein found in infected lysates but not in mature particles. 1?, 2? and 3? lysates accumulate a single distinctive class of particle (“proheads”), which are spherical and not full of DNA, but which contain some internal material. Gene 1 protein is in the mature particle, gene 2 protein is not.Cells infected with mutants of the remaining five genes (10, 26, 16, 20 and 9) accumulate mature length DNA. 10? and 26? lysates accumulate empty phage heads, but examination of freshly lysed cells shows that many were initially full heads. These heads can be converted to viable phage by in vitro complementation in concentrated extracts. 16? and 20? lysates accumulate phage particles that appear normal but are non-infectious, and which cannot be rescued in vitro.From the mutant phenotypes we conclude that an intact prohead structure is required to mature the virus DNA (i.e. to cut the overlength DNA concatemer to the mature length). Apparently this cutting occurs as part of the encapsulation event.  相似文献   

6.
Bacteriophages lysing strains of Thermomonospora alba and T. fusca were isolated, following specific enrichment, from vegetable composts. Four Thermomonospora phages were distinguished by plaque morphology and host range. Electron microscopy of phage particles, termperature inactivation profiles, and electrophoretic analyses of major virion proteins and genomic DNA were used in the comparison and initial characterization of these phages. The four phages studied possessed polyhedral heads and long tails; genomes were linear double-stranded DNA molecules, 35 to 45 kilobases in length, which probably contain cohesive ends. Transfection of Thermomonospora protoplasts with purified genomic DNA from one of the phages was demonstrated.  相似文献   

7.
Twenty-three temperate phages of Lactobacillus salivarius isolated from human feces were studied as to their morphological, biological, and serological properties. (1) Among 30 strains of L. salivarius tested, 23 strains were lysed by induction with mitomycin C (MC). In all these lysates, phage particles were detected by electron microscopic examination. (2) These phages were morphologically divided into three groups: particles with a regular hexagonal head and a long flexible tail; particles having a regular hexagonal head with or without a short tail-like structure; particles with an elongated head and a long noncontractile tail. (3) Only two, phage 223 having an elongated head and phage 227 with a regular hexagonal head and a long noncontractile tail, produced tiny and very turbid plaques on several host bacteria. Six phages could produce only inhibition zones, ranging from complete inhibition through partial inhibition to normal growth by a serial dilution spot test. (4) All these killer particles could also inhibit the growth of their producer cells. (5) A serological relationship was observed between temperate phages and killer particles, and this was somewhat consistent with the morphological groupings.  相似文献   

8.
A set of 83 lytic dairy bacteriophages (phages) infecting flavor-producing mesophilic starter strains of the Leuconostoc genus was characterized, and the first in-depth taxonomic scheme was established for this phage group. Phages were obtained from different sources, i.e., from dairy samples originating from 11 German dairies (50 Leuconostoc pseudomesenteroides [Ln. pseudomesenteroides] phages, 4 Ln. mesenteroides phages) and from 3 external phage collections (17 Ln. pseudomesenteroides phages, 12 Ln. mesenteroides phages). All phages belonged to the Siphoviridae family of phages with isometric heads (diameter, 55 nm) and noncontractile tails (length, 140 nm). With the exception of one phage (i.e., phage ΦLN25), all Ln. mesenteroides phages lysed the same host strains and revealed characteristic globular baseplate appendages. Phage ΦLN25, with different Y-shaped appendages, had a unique host range. Apart from two phages (i.e., phages P792 and P793), all Ln. pseudomesenteroides phages shared the same host range and had plain baseplates without distinguishable appendages. They were further characterized by the presence or absence of a collar below the phage head or by unique tails with straight striations. Phages P792 and P793 with characteristic fluffy baseplate appendages could propagate only on other specific hosts. All Ln. mesenteroides and all Ln. pseudomesenteroides phages were members of two (host species-specific) distinct genotypes but shared a limited conserved DNA region specifying their structural genes. A PCR detection system was established and was shown to be reliable for the detection of all Leuconostoc phage types.  相似文献   

9.
By selecting survivors of λ phage infection, mutants of Escherichia coli K12 that block reproduction cycle of the phage have been isolated. Fourteen of these phage-tolerant mutants (lam mutants) were chosen and characterized biochemically and genetically. It was shown that these mutants were tolerant to infection by all the lambdoid phages, except for few cases, but they were susceptible to infection by a non-lambdoid temperate phage (φ299), P1 or T phages. The mutants can be divided into at least three groups: (1) A mutant (lam 16) strain that seems to block normal penetration of phage DNA: (2) Three mutant (lam 64, lam 67 and lam 71) strains that block an “early” step(s) of phage growth, including phage DNA synthesis: (3) Six mutant (lam 24, lam 25, lam 26, lam 27, lam 646 and lam 6) strains that block normal functioning of the gene E products and produce unusual head structures. Some lambdoid phages and λ mutants that overcome the interference by the lam mutations have been obtained, and were used as tools for characterizing the host mutations. Two (lam 12 and lam 13) mutant strains and one (lam 1) mutant were inferred as affecting the expression of “late” genes, and early gene, respectively, by this test.  相似文献   

10.
11.

Background

Bacteriophages that infect the opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa have been classified into several groups. One of them, which includes temperate phage particles with icosahedral heads and long flexible tails, bears genomes whose architecture and replication mechanism, but not their nucleotide sequences, are like those of coliphage Mu. By comparing the genomic sequences of this group of P. aeruginosa phages one could draw conclusions about their ontogeny and evolution.

Results

Two newly isolated Mu-like phages of P. aeruginosa are described and their genomes sequenced and compared with those available in the public data banks. The genome sequences of the two phages are similar to each other and to those of a group of P. aeruginosa transposable phages. Comparing twelve of these genomes revealed a common genomic architecture in the group. Each phage genome had numerous genes with homologues in all the other genomes and a set of variable genes specific for each genome. The first group, which comprised most of the genes with assigned functions, was named “core genome”, and the second group, containing mostly short ORFs without assigned functions was called “accessory genome”. Like in other phage groups, variable genes are confined to specific regions in the genome.

Conclusion

Based on the known and inferred functions for some of the variable genes of the phages analyzed here, they appear to confer selective advantages for the phage survival under particular host conditions. We speculate that phages have developed a mechanism for horizontally acquiring genes to incorporate them at specific loci in the genome that help phage adaptation to the selective pressures imposed by the host.

Electronic supplementary material

The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/1471-2164-15-1146) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.  相似文献   

12.
The prevalence and nature of Shiga toxin (Stx)-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) and Stx phage were investigated in 720 swine fecal samples randomly collected from a commercial breeding pig farm in China over a 1-year surveillance period. Eight STEC O157 (1.1%), 33 STEC non-O157 (4.6%), and two stx-negative O157 (0.3%) isolates were identified. Fecal filtrates were screened directly for Stx phages using E. coli K-12 derivative strains MC1061 as indicator, yielding 15 Stx1 and 57 Stx2 phages. One Stx1 and eight Stx2 phages were obtained following norfloxacin induction of the eight field STEC O157 isolates. All Stx1 phages had hexagonal heads with long tails, while Stx2 phages had three different morphologies. Notably, most of field STEC O157 isolates released more free phages and Stx toxin after induction with ciprofloxacin. Furthermore, upon infection with the recombinant phage ΦMin27(Δstx::cat), E. coli laboratory strains produced both lysogenic and lytic phage, whereas two of the eight O157 STEC isolates produced only lysogens. The lysogens from laboratory strains produced infectious particles similar to ΦMin27. Similarly, the lysogens from the STEC O157 isolates released Stx phage too, although free ΦMin27(Δstx::cat) particles were not detected. Collectively, our results reveal that breeding pig farms could be important reservoirs for Stx phages and that residual antibacterial agents may enhance the release of Stx phages and the expression of Stx.  相似文献   

13.
We have identified and characterized structural intermediates in phage P22 assembly. Three classes of particles can be isolated from P22-infected cells: 500 S full heads or phage, 170 S empty heads, and 240 S “proheads”. One or more of these classes are missing from cells infected with mutants defective in the genes for phage head assembly. By determining the protein composition of all classes of particles from wild type and mutant-infected cells, and examining the time-course of particle assembly, we have been able to define many steps in the pathway of P22 morphogenesis.In pulse-chase experiments, the earliest structural intermediate we find is a 240 S prohead; it contains two major protein species, the products of genes 5 and 8. Gene 5 protein (p5) is the major phage coat protein. Gene 8 protein is not found in mature phage. The proheads contain, in addition, four minor protein species, PI, P16, P20 and PX. Similar prohead structures accumulate in lysates made with mutants of three genes, 1, 2 and 3, which accumulate uncut DNA. The second intermediate, which we identify indirectly, is a newly filled (with DNA) head that breaks down on isolation to 170 S empty heads. This form contains no P8, but does contain five of the six protein species of complete heads. Such structures accumulate in lysates made with mutants of two genes, 10 and 26.Experiments with a temperature-sensitive mutant in gene 3 show that proheads from such 3? infected cells are convertible to mature phage in vivo, with concomitant loss of P8. The molecules of P8 are not cleaved during this process and the data suggest that they may be re-used to form further proheads.Detailed examination of 8? lysates revealed aberrant aggregates of P5. Since P8 is required for phage morphogenesis, but is removed from proheads during DNA encapsulation, we have termed it a scaffolding protein, though it may have DNA encapsulation functions as well.All the experimental observations of this and the accompanying paper can be accounted for by an assembly pathway, in which the scaffolding protein P8 complexes with the major coat protein P5 to form a properly dimensioned prohead. With the function of the products of genes 1, 2 and 3, the prohead encapsulates and cuts a headful of DNA from the concatemer. Coupled with this process is the exit of the P8 molecules, which may then recycle to form further proheads. The newly filled heads are then stabilized by the action of P26 and gene 10 product to give complete phage heads.  相似文献   

14.
Host participation in bacteriophage lambda head assembly   总被引:55,自引:0,他引:55  
Mutants of Escherichia coli, called groE, specifically block assembly of bacteriophage λ heads. When groE bacteria are infected by wild type λ, phage adsorption, DNA injection and replication, tail assembly, and cell lysis are all normal. No active heads are formed, however, and head related “monsters” are seen in lysates. These monsters are similar to the structures seen on infection of wild-type cells by phage defective in genes B or C.We have isolated mutants of λ which can overcome the block in groE hosts and have mapped these mutants. All groE mutations can be compensated for by mutation of phage gene E (hence the name groE). Gene E codes for the major structural subunit of the phage head. Some groE mutants, called groEB, can be compensated by mutation in either gene E or in gene B. Gene B is another head gene.During normal head assembly the protein encoded by phage head gene B or C appears to be converted to a lower molecular weight form, h3, which is found in phage. The appearance of h3 protein in fast sedimenting head related structures requires the host groE function.We suggest that the proteins encoded by phage genes E, B and C, and the bacterial component defined by groE mutations act together at an early stage in head assembly.  相似文献   

15.
Three new methods applying a novel approach for rapid and simple detection of specific bacteria, based on plaque formation as the end point of the phage lytic cycle, are described. Different procedures were designed to ensure that the resulting plaques were derived only from infected target bacteria (“infectious centers”). (i) A pair of amber mutants that cannot form plaques at concentrations lower than their reversion rate underwent complementation in the tested bacteria; the number of plaques formed was proportional to the concentration of the bacteria that were coinfected by these phage mutants. (ii) UV-irradiated phages were recovered by photoreactivation and/or SOS repair mediated by target bacteria and plated on a recA uvrA bacterial lawn in the dark to avoid recovery of noninfecting phages. (iii) Pairs of temperature-sensitive mutants were allowed to coinfect their target bacteria at the permissive temperature, followed by incubation of the plates at the restrictive temperature to avoid phage infection of the host cells. This method allowed the omission of centrifuging and washing the infected cells. Only phages that recovered by recombination or complementation were able to form plaques. The detection limit was 1 to 10 living Salmonella or Escherichia coli O157 cells after 3 to 5 h. The antibiotic susceptibility of the target bacteria could also be determined in each of these procedures by preincubating the target bacteria with antibiotic prior to phage infection. Bacteria sensitive to the antibiotic lost the ability to form infectious centers.  相似文献   

16.
A group of 12 Pseudomonas aeruginosa virulent bacteriophages of different origin scored with regard to the plaque phenotype are assigned to PB1-like species based on the similarity in respect to morphology of particles and high DNA homology. Phages differ in restriction profile and the set of capsid major proteins. For the purpose of studying adsorption properties of these phages, 20 random spontaneous mutants of P. aeruginosa PAO1 with the disturbed adsorption placed in two groups were isolated. Mutants of the first group completely lost the ability to adsorb all phages of this species. It is assumed that their adsorption receptors are functionally inactive or lost at all, because the attempt to isolate phage mutants or detect natural phages of PB1 species capable of overcoming resistance of these bacteria failed. The second group includes five bacterial mutants resistant to the majority of phages belonging to species PB1. These mutants maintain the vigorous growth of phage SN and poor growth of phage 9/3, which forms turbid plaques with low efficiency of plating. In the background of weak growth, phage 9/3 yields plaques that grew well. The examination of the progeny of phage 9/3, which can grow on these bacteria, showed that its DNA differed from DNA of the original phage 9/3 by restriction profile and is identical to DNA of phage PB1 with regard to this trait. Data supported a suggestion that this phage variant resulted from recombination of phage 9/3 DNA with the locus of P. aeruginosa PAO1 genome encoding the bacteriocinogenic factor R. However, this variant of phage 9/3 did not manifest the ability to grow on phage-resistant mutants of the first group. Possible reasons for the difference between phages 9/3 or SN and the remaining phages of PB1 species are discussed. A preliminary formal scheme of the modular structure for adsorption receptors on the surface of P. aeruginosa PAO1 bacteria was constructed based on the analysis of growth of some other phage species on adsorption mutants of the first type.  相似文献   

17.
Aims: To evaluate a qPCR‐based protocol for the enumeration of Shiga toxin (Stx) 2 phages and to compare the results of qPCR with the number of infective Stx phage particles. Methods and Results: An approach based on qPCR was applied to count Stx phages in five phage lysates of known titre. The number of viral particles from each phage lysate was determined by electron microscopy using latex spheres. The infectivity of the Stx phages was evaluated onto three bacterial host strains, by double agar layer assay and plaque blot hybridization. The number of phage particles detected by electron microscopy correlates with the number calculated by qPCR in all the phages assayed. The number of infectious phages was from 1 to 3 log10 units below the numbers obtained by qPCR and electron microscopy. Conclusions: The approach allows accurate quantification of Stx phages with a high recovery. The number of infectious phages is always below the number of phage particles detected by qPCR. Significance and Impact of the Study: The qPCR method is a good approach to enumerate Stx phages. However, these results should be carefully considered when related to the number of infectious phages for each lysate that could be applied in real samples, because values of infectious particles are always below the number of Stx phages detected by qPCR.  相似文献   

18.

Background

Paenibacillus larvae is a Firmicute bacterium that causes American Foulbrood, a lethal disease in honeybees and is a major source of global agricultural losses. Although P. larvae phages were isolated prior to 2013, no full genome sequences of P. larvae bacteriophages were published or analyzed. This report includes an in-depth analysis of the structure, genomes, and relatedness of P. larvae myoviruses Abouo, Davis, Emery, Jimmer1, Jimmer2, and siphovirus phiIBB_Pl23 to each other and to other known phages.

Results

P. larvae phages Abouo, Davies, Emery, Jimmer1, and Jimmer2 are myoviruses with ~50 kbp genomes. The six P. larvae phages form three distinct groups by dotplot analysis. An annotated linear genome map of these six phages displays important identifiable genes and demonstrates the relationship between phages. Sixty phage assembly or structural protein genes and 133 regulatory or other non-structural protein genes were identifiable among the six P. larvae phages. Jimmer1, Jimmer2, and Davies formed stable lysogens resistant to superinfection by genetically similar phages. The correlation between tape measure protein gene length and phage tail length allowed identification of co-isolated phages Emery and Abouo in electron micrographs. A Phamerator database was assembled with the P. larvae phage genomes and 107 genomes of Firmicute-infecting phages, including 71 Bacillus phages. Phamerator identified conserved domains in 1,501 of 6,181 phamilies (only 24.3%) encoded by genes in the database and revealed that P. larvae phage genomes shared at least one phamily with 72 of the 107 other phages. The phamily relationship of large terminase proteins was used to indicate putative DNA packaging strategies. Analyses from CoreGenes, Phamerator, and electron micrograph measurements indicated Jimmer1, Jimmer2, Abouo and Davies were related to phages phiC2, EJ-1, KC5a, and AQ113, which are small-genome myoviruses that infect Streptococcus, Lactobacillus, and Clostridium, respectively.

Conclusions

This paper represents the first comparison of phage genomes in the Paenibacillus genus and the first organization of P. larvae phages based on sequence and structure. This analysis provides an important contribution to the field of bacteriophage genomics by serving as a foundation on which to build an understanding of the natural predators of P. larvae.

Electronic supplementary material

The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/1471-2164-15-745) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.  相似文献   

19.
Giant T4 bacteriophage were found by Doermann et al. (1973a) with point mutants in gene 23 and by Cummings et al. (1973) after l-canavanine induction followed by an arginine chase. We now find T4 giant phage with 14 out of 15 tested temperature-sensitive mutants in gene 24 grown at intermediate temperatures between 33 °C and 37 °C.For one of these mutants, T4,24(tsB86), we found that (a) the optimum temperature for giant phage production is 34.8 °C, (b) the head-length distribution peaks sharply between 10 and 12 normal T4 phage head lengths, (c) about 75% of our giant phage have two tails, (d) the buoyant density in CsCl is greater than that of normal phage, (e) they are infectious and show an increased u.v. resistance, (f) their sodium dodecyl sulphate gel electrophoresis pattern is qualitatively similar to that of normal T4 phage, although the relative intensities of some of the bands are different, showing for example, a decreased P241P2312 ratio, (g) optical diffraction and filtering of the flattened cylindrical part of the giant heads show a p6 surface net with a lattice constant of approximately 130 Å, a unique uv ratio of 155 and a capsomer morphology of the type 1 + 6 + 6.Mixed infections with T4 wild type and T4.24(amN65) also yield giant phage. These are produced in highest amounts with a multiplicity of infection ratio of 5:5; no giants are observed at ratios of 1:9 or 9:1, suggesting that their formation may be caused by a dosage effect of P24.  相似文献   

20.
Electrophoresis studies showed that at least three phage-specified proteins undergo proteolytic cleavage during the development of bacteriophage T5. One of these proteins has a molecular weight of about 135,000 and the product of this cleavage reaction is a minor component of the T5 tail, having a molecular weight of about 128,000. All of the tail-defective T5 mutants studied in this report failed to induce this cleavage reaction under restrictive conditions. This reaction also failed to occur in Escherichia coli groEA639 and groEA36 infected with wild type T5. Examination of lysates of infected groE cells in the electron microscope revealed the presence of filled and empty heads as well as tubular head structures, but no tails were detected. The filled heads were able to combine with separately prepared T5 tails in vitro to form infectious phage particles. Therefore, propagation of T5 in these groE mutants is prevented primarily by a specific block in tail assembly. A T5 mutant, T5?6, was isolated, which has the capacity to propagate in these groE hosts. The gene locus in T5?6 was mapped.The second T5 protein which is cleaved has a molecular weight of 50,000 and is related to head morphogenesis. Treatment of infected cells with l-canavanine (50 μg/ml) inhibited cleavage of this polypeptide. Only small quantities of the major head protein (32,000 mol. wt) were produced in these treated cells. Treatment with canavanine lead to production of tubular heads. The major protein component of partially purified tubular heads has a molecular weight of 50,000. Cells infected with T5 amber H30b, a mutant defective in head gene D20, does not produce the 50,000 and 32,000 molecular weight proteins. These findings suggest that the 50,000 molecular weight protein undergoes cleavage to form the major head polypeptide. A third T5 protein is cleaved to form a minor head component with a molecular weight of 43,000 and its cleavage is linked to that involving the major head protein.  相似文献   

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