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1.
We have investigated the binding of the f1 single-stranded DNA-binding protein (gene V protein) to DNA oligonucleotides and RNA synthesized in vitro. The first 16 nucleotides of the f1 gene II mRNA leader sequence were previously identified as the gene II RNA-operator; the target to which the gene V protein binds to repress gene II translation. Using a gel retardation assay, we find that the preferential binding of gene V protein to an RNA carrying the gene II RNA-operator sequence is affected by mutations which abolish gene II translational repression in vivo. In vitro, gene V protein also binds preferentially to a DNA oligonucleotide whose sequence is the DNA analog of the wild-type gene II RNA-operator. Therefore, the gene V protein recognizes the gene II mRNA operator sequence when present in either an RNA or DNA context.  相似文献   

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The gene V protein of the filamentous bacteriophages f1, fd and M13, and the gene 32 protein of bacteriophage T4 share the property of binding strongly and co-operatively to single-stranded nucleic acids, especially DNA. Moreover, both are capable of repressing the translation of specific mRNAs (gene 32 protein its own, and gene V protein that of the filamentous phage gene II), both in vivo and in vitro. If the mechanism of repression by either of these proteins were based solely on its ability to bind single strands co-operatively, then the other would be expected to mimic or interfere with its effect in vitro. We have found no such mimicry or interference, even at protein concentrations high enough to have substantial non-specific effects on translation. This suggests that the sites of repression on the mRNAs must offer something other than simple “unstructuredness” for binding and repression to occur.  相似文献   

4.
Two filamentous phage gene products are required for the replication of phage DNA. One of these, the gene II protein, is a site-specific endonuclease required for all phage-specific DNA synthesis. The other, the gene V protein, is a single-stranded DNA-binding protein required only for single-strand synthesis. Purified gene V protein, when added to an in vitro protein synthesizing system programmed by f1 DNA, specifically inhibits the synthesis of gene II protein. Inhibition seems to be translational, since synthesis of gene II protein from an RNA template is also inhibited by gene V protein. Gene V protein control of gene II expression can account for the regulation of the level of expression of the filamentous phage genome.  相似文献   

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A DNA binding protein encoded by the filamentous single-stranded DNA phage IKe has been isolated from IKe-infected Escherichia coli cells. Fluorescence and in vitro binding studies have shown that the protein binds co-operatively and with a high specificity to single-stranded but not to double-stranded DNA. From titration of the protein to poly(dA) it has been calculated that approximately four bases of the DNA are covered by one monomer of protein. These binding characteristics closely resemble those of gene V protein encoded by the F-specific filamentous phages M13 and fd. The nucleotide sequence of the gene specifying the IKe DNA binding protein has been established. When compared to the nucleotide sequence of gene V of phage M13 it shows an homology of 58%, indicating that these two phages are evolutionarily related. The IKe DNA binding protein is 88 amino acids long which is one amino acid residue larger than the gene V protein sequence. When the IKe DNA binding protein sequence is compared with that of gene V protein it was found that 39 amino acid residues have identical positions in both proteins. The positions of all five tyrosine residues, a number of which are known to be involved in DNA binding, are conserved. Secondary structure predictions indicate that the two proteins contain similar structural domains. It is proposed that the tyrosine residues which are involved in DNA binding are the ones in or next to a beta-turn, at positions 26, 41 and 56 in gene V protein and at positions 27, 42 and 57 in the IKe DNA binding protein.  相似文献   

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Expression of human immunodeficiency virus-1 integrase in Escherichia coli, at levels that had no effect on bacterial cell growth, blocked plaque formation by bacteriophages having single-stranded genomic DNA (M13) or RNA (R17, Q, PRR1). Plaque formation by phages having double-stranded genomic DNA (T4, PR4) was unaffected. Integrase also inhibited infection by the phagemid M13KO7, but it had no effect on production of phage once infection by M13KO7 was established. This result indicated that integrase affects an early stage in infection. Integrase also inhibited phage production following transfection by either single-stranded or double-stranded (replicative form) M13 DNA, it blocked M13 DNA replication, as assayed by incorporation of radioactive nucleotides into DNA, and it failed to affect bacterial pilus function. These data suggest that integrase interacts in vivo with phage nucleic acid, a conclusion supported by studies in which integrase was shown to have a DNA-binding activity in its C-terminal portion. This portion of integrase was both necessary and sufficient for interference of plaque formation by M13 in the present study. Expression of the N-terminal portion of integrase at the same level as intact integrase had little effect on phage growth, indicating that expression of foreign protein in general was not responsible for the inhibitory effect. The simple bacteriophage assay described is potentially useful for identifying integrase mutants that lack single-stranded DNA binding activity.  相似文献   

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Introduction of a deletion in the genome of wild-type M13 bacteriophage that eliminates translational repression of M13 gene II by its cognate gene V protein had no effect on phage viability. Furthermore, it was noted that gene V protein of phage IKe, a distant relative of M13, does not function as a translational repressor of its cognate gene II protein. The data strongly indicate that the gene V protein-mediated control of gene II expression in bacteriophage M13 is an evolutionary relic of the ancestral filamentous-phage genome and thus dispensable for proper filamentous-phage replication.  相似文献   

11.
A system for shotgun DNA sequencing.   总被引:848,自引:197,他引:651       下载免费PDF全文
A multipurpose cloning site has been introduced into the gene for beta-galactosidase (beta-D-galactosidegalactohydrolase, EC 3.21.23) on the single-stranded DNA phage M13mp2 (Gronenborn, B. and Messing, J., (1978) Nature 272, 375-377) with the use of synthetic DNA. The site contributes 14 additional codons and does not affect the ability of the lac gene product to undergo intracistronic complementation. Two restriction endonuclease cleavage sites in the viral gene II were removed by single base-pair mutations. Using the new phage M13mp7, DNA fragments generated by cleavage with a variety of different restriction endonucleases can be cloned directly. The nucleotide sequences of the cloned DNAs can be determined rapidly by DNA synthesis using chain terminators and a synthetic oligonucleotide primer complementary to 15 bases preceeding the new array of restriction sites.  相似文献   

12.
Filamentous phage gene V, which encodes a single-stranded DNA binding protein, has been cloned and placed under control of the lac promoter. Cells bearing the clone are refractory to filamentous phage infection if the expression of the gene is induced with isopropyl-1-thio-beta-D-galactoside. The inhibition of infection is shown to occur at an early stage, and can be reversed if the cells express gene II in addition to gene V protein. These observations support the hypothesis that gene II protein, in addition to its role in nicking and facilitating the synthesis of phage viral (+) strand DNA, functions to prevent the gene V-mediated inhibition of complementary (-) strand synthesis. We proposed a model in which the absolute and relative concentrations of the products of genes II, X and V determine whether a single strand is to be exported as phage or incorporated into double-stranded replicative form DNA.  相似文献   

13.
In pairs of adjacent genes co-transcribed on bacterial polycistronic mRNAs, translation of the first coding region frequently functions as a positive factor to couple translation to the distal coding region. Coupling efficiencies vary over a wide range, but synthesis of both gene products at similar levels is common. We report the results of characterizing an unusual gene pair, in which only about 1% of the translational activity from the upstream gene is transmitted to the distal gene. The inefficient coupling was unexpected because the upstream gene is highly translated, the distal initiation site has weak but intrinsic ability to bind ribosomes, and the AUG is only two nucleotides beyond the stop codon for the upstream gene. The genes are those in the filamentous phage IKe genome, which encode the abundant single-stranded DNA binding protein (gene V) and the minor coat protein that caps one tip of the phage (gene VII). Here, we have used chimeras between the related phage IKe and f1 sequences to localize the region responsible for inefficient coupling. It mapped upstream from the intercistronic region containing the gene V stop codon and the gene VII initiation site, indicating that low coupling efficiency is associated with gene V. The basis for inefficient coupling emerged when coupling efficiency was found to increase as gene V translation was decreased below the high wild-type level. This was achieved by lowering the rate of elongation and by decreasing the efficiency of suppression at an amber codon within the gene. Increasing the strength of the Shine-Dalgarno interaction with 16S rRNA at the gene VII start also increased coupling efficiency substantially. In this gene pair, upstream translation thus functions in an unprecedented way as a negative factor to limit downstream expression. We interpret the results as evidence that translation in excess of an optimal level in an upstream gene interferes with coupling in the intercistronic junction.  相似文献   

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S Artz  D Holzschu  P Blum  R Shand 《Gene》1983,26(2-3):147-158
A restriction map was determined for a phi 80 lambda dhis transducing phage DNA carrying the Salmonella typhimurium histidine operon. DNA fragments containing the promoter/regulatory region and the first two structural genes of the histidine operon (hisOGD) were identified by their ability to direct regulated synthesis of histidinol dehydrogenase (product of hisD) in a coupled in vitro protein synthesizing system. A 3.1-kb SalI-EcoRI restriction fragment containing the hisOGD region, was subcloned into phage M13mp8 and M13mp9 RF DNAs. Methods are described for shuttling mutant and wild-type bacterial DNA sequences between the M13mp::his phage and host bacterial genomes. Of novel importance is the use of the phage M13 gene II amber mutation to obtain integration of the M13mp::his phage genome into the homologous his region of the bacterial chromosome following transduction of recipients lacking an amber suppressor. This method can be used to facilitate allele replacement with genes carried on M13 transducing phages.  相似文献   

16.
By means of 2D NMR techniques, all backbone resonances in the 1H NMR spectrum of the single-stranded DNA binding protein encoded by gene V of the filamentous phage IKe have been assigned sequence specifically (at pH 4.6, T = 298 K). In addition, a major part of the side chain resonances could be assigned as well. Analysis of NOESY data permitted the elucidation of the secondary structure of IKe gene V protein. The major part of this secondary structure is present as an antiparallel beta-sheet, i.e., as two beta-loops which partly combine into a triple-stranded beta-sheet structure, one beta-loop and one triple-stranded beta-sheet structure. It is shown that a high degree of homology exists with the secondary structure of the single-stranded DNA binding protein encoded by gene V of the distantly related filamentous phage M13.  相似文献   

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A chimeric single-stranded DNA phage, M13Gori1, has been formed as a result of the in vitro insertion of a 2216 base-pair HaeII fragment of bacteriophage G4 replicative form DNA into the replicative form DNA of bacteriophage M13. The inserted G4 DNA carries the dnaG-dependent origin for G4 complementary strand synthesis. The cloned G4 origin functions both in vivo and in vitro in the conversion of M13Gori1 single-stranded viral DNA to the duplex replicative form by a rifampicin-resistant mechanism. Labelling of the 3′ terminus of the single discontinuity in M13Gori1 replicative form II molecules synthesized in crude extracts and subsequent restriction analysis indicate that M13Gori1 complementary strand synthesis can be initiated at either the RNA polymeraseprimed M13 origin or at the dnaG-primed G4 origin. The M13Gori1 complementary strand initiated at the G4 origin terminates in the vicinity of the G4 origin after progressing around the circular template and traversing the M13 origin region, indicating the absence of a specific nucleotide sequence in the M13 origin for termination of the newly formed complementary strand. The ability of this chimeric phage to utilize the cloned G4 origin in vivo even in the presence of the presumed M13 pilot protein (gene 3 protein) indicate that the nucleotide sequence of the replication origin is sufficient for recognizing the appropriate initiation enzymes. Since decapsidation of M13 is tightly coupled to replicative form formation, initiation at the G4 origin, located over 1000 nucleotides from the M13 complementary strand origin, indicates that widely separated nucleotide sequences contained in the filamentous virion can be exposed to the cell cytoplasm during eclipse.  相似文献   

19.
Gene II protein is required for all phases of filamentous phage DNA synthesis other than the conversion of the infecting single strand to the parental double-stranded molecule. It introduces a specific nick into the double-stranded replicative form DNA, is required for the initiation of (+) strand synthesis and is responsible for termination and ring closure of the (+) strand product. Here we show that the gene II protein also promotes minus strand synthesis later in infection. Over-expression of gene II protein can induce the conversion of all nascent single-stranded phage DNA to the double-stranded form, even in the presence of the single-stranded DNA-binding gene V protein that would normally sequester the newly synthesized single strands. We also present evidence that the gene X protein (separately translated from an initiator codon within gene II, and identical to the C-terminal one-third of the gene II protein) is a powerful inhibitor of phage-specific DNA synthesis in vivo.  相似文献   

20.
In-frame overlapping genes in phage, plasmid and bacterial genomes permit synthesis of more than one form of protein from the same gene. Having one gene entirely within another rather than two separate genes presumably precludes recombination events between the identical sequences. However, studies of such gene pairs indicate that the overlapping arrangement can make regulation of the genes more difficult. Here, we extend studies of in-frame overlapping genes II and X from filamentous phage f1 to determine if translational controls are required to regulate the gene properly. These genes encode proteins (pII and pX) with essential but opposing roles in phage DNA replication. They must be tightly regulated to maintain production of the proteins at relative steady state levels that permit continuous replication without killing the host. To determine why little or no pX appears to be made on the gene II/X mRNA, gene II translation was lowered by progressively deleting into the gene II initiator region. Increased pX translation resulted, suggesting that elongating ribosomes on the gene II mRNA interfere with internal initiation on the gene X ribosome binding site and limit gene X translation. As judged from systematically lowering the efficiency of suppression at a gene II amber codon upstream from the gene X start, the already modest level of gene II translation would have to be reduced by more than twofold to relieve all interference with internal initiation. Further downregulation of gene X expression proved to be required to maintain pX at levels relative to pII that are tolerated by the cell. Site-directed mutagenesis and nuclease mapping revealed that the gene X initiation site is sequestered in an extended RNA secondary structure that lowers gene X translation on the two mRNAs encoding it. The more general implications of the results for expression of in-frame overlapping genes are discussed.  相似文献   

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