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1.
Quantitative measurements on number, size, shape, location and time of appearance of heads and head-related structures in thin sections of induced bacteriophage λ lysogens were performed. Three types of particles can be distinguished: empty heads with a mean diameter of 39 nm (petit λ), heads partially filled with DNA with a mean diameter of 51 nm (grizzled particles) and particles filled with DNA, having a diameter of 47 nm (black particles). Some of the latter ones can be seen with a tail attached. The particles first to appear are the petit λ. A few minutes later grizzled and black particles can be seen. This sequence correspons to measurements of biological activities in lysates, i.e. to plaque-forming units, and to the number of particles which can be packaged with DNA and transformed in vitro to plaque-forming particles, respectively.DNA packaging seems to occur on the boundary area between cytoplasm and DNA plasm. Tails, on the other hand, accumulate near the cytoplasmic membrane.Two steps in DNA packaging can be distinguished, since one type of mutant blocked in DNA packaging (amber in gene A) produces paracrystalline agglomerations of petit λ and clusters of tails while another (amber in gene D) produces grizzled particles in addition.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
The cohesive ends of the DNA of bacteriophage λ particles are normally formed by the action of a nuclease on the cohesive end sites (cos) of concatemeric λ DNA (reviewed by Hohn et al., 1977). The nuclease also cuts the cos site of an integrated prophage, and DNA located to the right is preferentially packaged into phage particles. This process occurs with approximately the same efficiency and rate in a single lysogen as in a tandem polylysogen. Thus, the rate of cos cutting does not increase when the number of cos sites per molecule increases, an hypothesis that has been proposed to explain why cohesive ends are not formed in circular monomers of λ DNA. We propose instead that the interaction of Ter with cos is influenced by the configuration of the DNA outside of cos during packaging, and that this configuration is different for circular monomers than for other forms of λ DNA. A model that gives rise to such a difference is described.We also found that missense mutations in the λ A gene changed the efficiency of packaging of phage relative to host DNA. This was not the case for missense mutations in several phage genes required for capsid formation. Thus, the product of gene A plays a role in determining packaging specificity, as expected if it is or is part of the nuclease that cuts λ DNA at cos.  相似文献   

4.
The incorporation of tritiated thymidine in Amoeba proteus was reinvestigated in order to see if it could be associated with microscopically detectable structures. Staining experiments with basic dyes, including the fluorochrome acridine orange, revealed the presence of large numbers of 0.3 to 0.5 µ particles in the cytoplasm of all cells studied. The effect of nuclease digestion on the dye affinity of the particles suggests that they contain DNA as well as RNA. Centrifugation of living cells at 10,000 g leads to the sedimentation of the particles in the centrifugal third of the ameba near the nucleus. Analysis of centrifuged cells which had been incubated with H3-thymidine showed a very high degree of correlation between the location of the nucleic acid-containing granules and that of acid-insoluble, deoxyribonuclease-sensitive labeled molecules and leads to the conclusion that cytoplasmic DNA synthesis in Amoeba proteus occurs in association with these particles.  相似文献   

5.
Lysates of bacteriophage λ, mutant in the head gene D, contain a minor amount of defective particles which can be isolated and complemented to infective particles by adding purified gene D product. The defective particles contain DNA with a specific infectivity in the helper assay of about 10% of phage DNA. This DNA is firmly held in the capsid and a tail is attached. Although the particles adsorb to sensitive bacteria, the DNA is not injected. The complemented, infectious particles differ from normal phage by having a lower density. After growing in a permissive host, phage particles of normal density are produced. The implications of the ability of gene D protein to bind to otherwise complete particles as a last step are discussed.  相似文献   

6.
Maturation of the head of bacteriophage T4. I. DNA packaging events   总被引:480,自引:0,他引:480  
Pulse-chase experiments in wild-type and mutant phage-infected cells provide evidence that the following particles called prohead I, II and III are successive precursors to the mature heads. The prohead I particles contain predominantly the precursor protein P23 and possibly P22 (mol. wt 31,000) and IP III (mol. wt 24,000) and have an s value of about 400 S. Concomitantly with the cleavage of most of P23 (mol. wt 55,000) to P231 (mol. wt 45,000), they are rapidly converted into prohead II particles which sediment with about 350 S. The prohead II particles contain, in addition to P231, the major constituents of the viral shella—a core consisting of proteins P22 and IP III. In cell lysates, prohead I and prohead II particles contain no DNA in a DNase-resistant form and are not bound to the replicative DNA. We cannot, however, positively rule out the possibility that these particles may have contained some DNA while in the cells.The prohead II particles are in turn converted into particles which sediment with about 550 S after DNase treatment (prohead III). During this conversion about 50% of normal DNA complement becomes packaged in a DNase-resistant form, and roughly 50% of the core proteins P22 and IP III are cleaved. In lysates the prohead III particles are attached to the replicative DNA. The prohead III particle appears to be the immediate precursor of the full mature head (1100 S). Cleavage of protein P22 to small polypeptides and conversion of IP III IP III1 are completed at this time. No precursor proteins are found in the full heads. Studies with various mutant phage showed that the prohead II to III conversion is blocked by mutations in genes 16 and 17 and that the conversion of the prohead III particles to the mature heads is blocked by mutations in gene 49. Cleavage of the head proteins, however, occurs normally in these mutant-infected cells. We conclude that the cleavage of the major component of the viral shell, P23, into P231 precedes the DNA packaging event, whereas cleavage of the core proteins P22 and IP III appears to be intimately linked to the DNA packaging event. Models relating the cleavage processes to DNA encapsulation are discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Studies with ndd mutants of phage T4, deficient in the ability to induce nuclear disruption, the movement of the host DNA from a largely central location in the cell into close association with the cell membrane, show that nuclear disruption is not essential for host DNA breakdown. Degradation of prelabeled host DNA to acid-soluble products occurs at the same rate in the absence of nuclear disruption as it does in its presence. Moreover, the absence of nuclear disruption results in an alternative pathway of slow degradation of host DNA independent of phage endonuclease II.M-band analyses of association between DNA andmembrane (Earhart et al., 1968) indicate that endonuclease II is required for the release of host DNA from the membrane when nuclear disruption occurs normally, and that the product of at least one of the genes rIIA, rIIB, D1 or D2a (probably D2a, which is necessary for the synthesis of endonuclease IV) is required for DNA release when nuclear disruption does not occur.Analyses of the sizes of host DNA single strands at various times after infection by means of alkaline sucrose density-gradients show that the presence or absence of nuclear disruption has little, if any, effect on the rate of accumulation of single-strand nicks. Neutral sucrose density-gradient analyses suggest that a limited number of double-strand breaks can accumulate in host DNA when endonuclease IV is active, but few, if any, occur when neither endonuclease II or IV is active.Gentle lysis of ndd-infected cells and subsequent sedimentation analysis of the host DNA in neutral sucrose density-gradients reveal that the host chromosomes become “unfolded” within five minutes after infection. Thin-section electron microscopy shows that the host DNA becomes widely dispersed throughout the cytoplasm of cells at late times after infection with ndd mutants. These observations make it very unlikely that nuclear disruption is a passive process which occurs whenever the forces or structures which maintain the normal state of the Escherichia coli nucleoid are altered.All of our data are consistent with a mechanism of nuclear disruption which involves multiple attachment of the host DNA to the cell membrane under the control of the D2b gene of phage T4. We propose that in ndd-infected cells this multiple attachment does not occur, with the result that a limited number of double-strand breaks release much of the host DNA from the cell membrane.  相似文献   

8.
The kinetics of the chromatin core particle reassembly reaction in solution were quantitatively studied under conditions such that nucleohistone aggregation did not occur. Core particles, salt-jumped rapidly by dilution from 2.5 m-NaCl (in which DNA and histones do not interact) to 0.6 m-NaCl (in which core particles are nearly intact), reassemble in two distinct time ranges. Approximately 75% of the DNA refolds into core particle-like structures “instantaneously” as measured by several physical and chemical techniques with dead times in the seconds to minutes time range. The remaining DNA refolds with relaxation times ranging from 250 minutes at 0 °C to 80 minutes at 37 °C; this slow effect cannot be attributed to sample heterogeneity. The fraction of slowly refolding DNA and the slow relaxation time are independent of the core particle concentration. Transient intermediates present during the slow phase of refolding were identified as free DNA and core particle-like structures containing excess histone. Mixing experiments with DNA, histones, and core particles showed that core particle-histone interactions are responsible for the slow kinetics of DNA refolding. Upon treatment of reassembling core particles with the protein crosslinking reagent, dimethylsuberimidate, the slow phase of the reassembly reaction was arrested and a 13 S particle containing DNA and two octamers of histone was isolated. Consistent with the nature of this kinetic intermediate, it is shown that in 0.6 m-NaCl, core particles co-operatively bind at least one additional equivalent of histones with high affinity in the form of excess octamers. Also, core particles continue to adsorb considerably more histones with a weaker association constant of the order 105m?1 (in units of octamers) to a maximum value of 12 ± 2 equivalents (octamers) per core particle. The sedimentation coefficient increases with the two-thirds power of the molecular weight of the complex, as it would in the case of clustered spheres.A reassembly mechanism consistent with the data is presented, and other simple mechanisms are excluded. In the proposed mechanism, core particles reassemble very rapidly and compete effectively with DNA for histones such that approximately one-third of the particles initially formed are complexed with an excess octamer of histones, and 25% of the total DNA remains uncomplexed. The amount of this unusual reaction intermediate decays slowly to an equilibrium value of about 10%, thereby leaving 9% of the total DNA uncomplexed. Approximate values are calculated for the free energies, rate constants, and two of the activation energies which characterize this migrating octamer mechanism. This mechanism provides a means whereby histone octamers can be temporarily stripped off DNA at a modest free energy cost, approximately 2.6 kcal per nucleosome. Also, the properties of excess histone adsorption by chromatin and octamer migration suggest an efficient mechanism, consistent with observations by others, for nucleosome assembly in vivo during replication.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
The induction of an excision-defective bacteriophage P22 lysogen results in the production of particles which carry a DNA molecule of normal length within a normal capsid, but which are nonetheless defective. The DNA content of these particles was characterized physically by a restriction enzyme analysis, and genetically by two marker rescue techniques. The particles carry DNA corresponding to one side of the prophage map as well as additional DNA, apparently derived from the host chromosome to one side of the prophage insertion site. Normally, mature P22 DNA molecules are derived from a concatemer by sequential cleavage of adjacent headful lengths, beginning at a genetically unique site, the encapsulation origin (Tye et al., 1974). The defective particles appear to contain DNA matured by the same sequential mechanisms, operating on the integrated prophage and neighboring bacterial chromosome, rather than on the normal concatemeric substrate. Both the initiation and directional specificities of normal maturation are maintained during the maturation of defective particle DNA. Sequential cleavage begins within the prophage at the encapsulation origin, a site near gene 3, and proceeds into the host chromosome on the proC side of the prophage. The initiation specificity of DNA encapsulation seems to reside in the morphogenetic machinery, rather than in the mechanism of DNA replication. Replication of an induced excision-defective prophage takes place in situ on the host chromosome, apparently without disruption of the linear integrity of the prophage. Further, the entire prophage, as well as adjacent bacterial DNA, is replicated, even though only a portion of this DNA is destined to be encapsulated.  相似文献   

11.
We have examined a series of lambda proheads and mature structures by small angle X-ray diffraction. This technique yields spherically averaged density distributions and some information about surface organization of particles in solution.We find that gpE 2 of proheads and heads forms shells with one of two radii; A?, B?, groE?, and Nu3? proheads have shells of radius 246 Å, while mature heads, urea-treated A? proheads and C? proheads have a radius of 300 Å. The expansion of proheads to mature heads is accompanied by a corresponding decrease in the thickness of the shell. groE? proheads contain a core. This core is lost spontaneously from the structure and is only observed if the structures are fixed with glutaraldehyde prior to examination by X-ray diffraction or electron microscopy.C? proheads expand to mature head size spontaneously. A preparation of C? proheads which was fixed with glutaraldehyde at an early stage of the purification had the smaller, prohead radius. Unfixed particles from this preparation expanded to the mature head size after further purification and standing in the cold for several days. This result suggests that gpC may be involved in regulating head expansion.The radii of the protein shells of mature heads are identical for a series of phages that contain between 78% and 105% of the wild-type complement of DNA, and this radius is the same as that of proheads expanded in the absence of DNA. These results with phage lambda indicate that assembly of a double shell structure composed of coat and scaffolding protein, followed by expansion to a larger shell containing only coat protein is a general feature of the morphogenesis of dsDNA phages.  相似文献   

12.
Late in the morphogenesis of bacteriophage lambda, DNA condenses into the nascent head and is cut from a concatemeric replicative intermediate by a nucleolytic function, Ter, acting at specific sites, called cos. As a result of this process, heads of lambda deletion mutants contain less DNA than those of the wild-type phage. It has been reported that phage with very large deletions (22% of the genome or more) grow poorly but that normal growth can be restored by the non-specific addition of DNA to the genome. This finding implies that DNA content may exert a physical effect on some stage of head assembly.We have investigated the effects of two long deletions, b221 and tdel33, on head assembly. Bacteria infected with the mutants were lysed with non-ionic detergent under conditions favoring stabilization of labile structures containing condensed DNA. It has proved possible to isolate two aberrant head-related structures produced by the deletion mutants. One of these (“overfilled heads”) contains DNA which is longer than the deletion mutant genome and is about the same size as that found in wild-type heads. These structures appear to be unable to attach tails. The second type of structure (“incompletely filled heads”) contains a short piece of DNA, 40% of the length of the mutant genome. The incompletely filled heads are found both with and without attached tails. Both of these abnormal structures are initially attached to the replicating DNA but are released by treatment with DNAase. The nature of these abnormal structures indicates that very small genomes affect a late stage of head morphogenesis, after the DNA is complexed with a capsid of normal size. The results presented suggest that underfilling of the capsid interferes with the ability of the Ter function to properly cleave cos.  相似文献   

13.
In order to understand in which biological processes the four-stranded G-quadruplex (G4) DNA structures play a role, it is important to determine which predicted regions can actually adopt a G4 structure. Here, to identify DNA regions in Schizosaccharomyces pombe that fold into G4 structures, we first optimized a quantitative PCR (qPCR) assay using the G4 stabilizer, PhenDC3. We call this method the qPCR stop assay, and used it to screen for G4 structures in genomic DNA. The presence of G4 stabilizers inhibited DNA amplification in 14/15 unexplored genomic regions in S. pombe that encompassed predicted G4 structures, suggesting that at these sites the stabilized G4 structure formed an obstacle for the DNA polymerase. Furthermore, the formation of G4 structures was confirmed by complementary in vitro assays. In vivo, the S. pombe G4 unwinder Pif1 helicase, Pfh1, was associated with tested G4 sites, suggesting that the G4 structures also formed in vivo. Thus, we propose that the confirmed G4 structures in S. pombe form an obstacle for replication in vivo, and that the qPCR stop assay is a method that can be used to identify G4 structures. Finally, we suggest that the qPCR stop assay can also be used for identifying G4 structures in other organisms, as well as being adapted to screen for novel G4 stabilizers.  相似文献   

14.
The freeze-fracture technique has been used to characterize the junctional devices involved in the electrical coupling of Ambystoma cardiac tissue. These cells are connected by junctions formed by either linear or circular arrays of particles. Such structures can be interpreted as a special type of gap junction. Gap junctions have also been investigated during the growth and differentiation of two amphibians, Rana and Xenopus. In both genera the earliest stage of junctional assembly is characterized by linear rows of particles. Later, a gradual transformation of these linear rows into circles was found. Finally, in the fully formed gap junctions, these circles appeared to join together into clusters. In summary, in the adult amphibian myocardial cells, three different types of gap junctions can be described. The first type, which has been observed in all embryonic stages and in adults in all three genera, consists of linear or circular arrays of particles: this is the only type of gap junction seen at any age in Xenopus. The second type, consisting of a variable number of anastomosing circles forming regular networks, is never observed in embryonic cells. It is typical of the adult frog heart and may also be seen in Ambystoma. The third type is characteristic only of adult Ambystoma heart and consists of geometrically packed particles identifiable with classic communicating macula. The fact that only the first class of structure is observed in Xenopus heart strongly supports the conclusion that such linear arrays of intramembranous particles really represent true functional electrical junctions.  相似文献   

15.
PY100 is a lytic bacteriophage with a broad host range within the genus Yersinia. The phage forms plaques on strains of the three human pathogenic species Yersinia enterocolitica, Y. pseudotuberculosis, and Y. pestis at 37°C. PY100 was isolated from farm manure and intended to be used in phage therapy trials. PY100 has an icosahedral capsid containing double-stranded DNA and a contractile tail. The genome consists of 50,291 bp and is predicted to contain 93 open reading frames (ORFs). PY100 gene products were found to be homologous to the capsid proteins and proteins involved in DNA metabolism of the enterobacterial phage T1; PY100 tail proteins possess homologies to putative tail proteins of phage AaΦ23 of Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans. In a proteome analysis of virion particles, 15 proteins of the head and tail structures were identified by mass spectrometry. The putative gene product of ORF2 of PY100 shows significant homology to the gene 3 product (small terminase subunit) of Salmonella phage P22 that is involved in packaging of the concatemeric phage DNA. The packaging mechanism of PY100 was analyzed by hybridization and sequence analysis of DNA isolated from virion particles. Newly replicated PY100 DNA is cut initially at a pac recognition site, which is located in the coding region of ORF2.  相似文献   

16.
Centrifuged, unfertilized eggs of the sea urchin, Arbacia punctulata, have been studied with the electron microscope. Subcellular particles were stratified by centrifuging living cells, known to be normally fertilizable, for five minutes at 3,000 g. The layered subcellular particles, including cortical granules, 16 mµ RNP particles, pigment, yolk, mitochondria, and oil droplets, possess characteristic ultrastructural features by which they may be identified in situ. The clear zone contains 16 mµ particles, most of them freely dispersed, scattered mitochondria, and a few composite structures made up of annulate lamellae in parallel layers or in association with dense, spherical aggregates of the RNP particles. Free 16 mµ particles are found, in addition, throughout the cell, in the interstices between the stratified larger particles. They show a tendency to form ramifying aggregates resulting from certain types of injury to the cell. A few vesicular structures, found mainly in the clear zone, have attached RNP particles, and appear to be related to the ER of tissue cells. Other vesicles, bounded by smooth membranes, are found throughout the cell. These are extremely variable in size, number, and distribution; their total number appears to depend upon conditions of fixation. It is suggested that limited formation of such structures is a normal property of the ground cytoplasm in this cell, but that fixed cells with very large numbers of smooth surfaced vesicles have produced the latter as a response to chemical injury. A model of the ground cytoplasm is proposed whose aim is to reconcile the rheological behavior of the living cell with the ultrastructural features observed.  相似文献   

17.
The tightly packaged double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) genome in the mature particles of many tailed bacteriophages has been shown to form multiple concentric rings when reconstructed from cryo-electron micrographs. However, recent single-particle DNA packaging force measurements have suggested that incompletely packaged DNA (ipDNA) is less ordered when it is shorter than ∼ 25% of the full genome length. The study presented here initially achieves both the isolation and the ipDNA length-based fractionation of ipDNA-containing T3 phage capsids (ipDNA-capsids) produced by DNA packaging in vivo; some ipDNA has quantized lengths, as judged by high-resolution gel electrophoresis of expelled DNA. This is the first isolation of such particles among the tailed dsDNA bacteriophages. The ipDNA-capsids are a minor component (containing ∼ 10− 4 of packaged DNA in all particles) and are initially detected by nondenaturing gel electrophoresis after partial purification by buoyant density centrifugation. The primary contaminants are aggregates of phage particles and empty capsids. This study then investigates ipDNA conformations by the first cryo-electron microscopy of ipDNA-capsids produced in vivo. The 3-D structures of DNA-free capsids, ipDNA-capsids with various lengths of ipDNA, and mature bacteriophage are reconstructed, which reveals the typical T = 7l icosahedral shell of many tailed dsDNA bacteriophages. Though the icosahedral shell structures of these capsids are indistinguishable at the current resolution for the protein shell (∼ 15 Å), the conformations of the DNA inside the shell are drastically different. T3 ipDNA-capsids with 10.6 kb or shorter dsDNA (< 28% of total genome) have an ipDNA conformation indistinguishable from random. However, T3 ipDNA-capsids with 22 kb DNA (58% of total genome) form a single DNA ring next to the inner surface of the capsid shell. In contrast, dsDNA fully packaged (38.2 kb) in mature T3 phage particles forms multiple concentric rings such as those seen in other tailed dsDNA bacteriophages. The distance between the icosahedral shell and the outermost DNA ring decreases in the mature, fully packaged phage structure. These results suggest that, in the early stage of DNA packaging, the dsDNA genome is randomly distributed inside the capsid, not preferentially packaged against the inner surface of the capsid shell, and that the multiple concentric dsDNA rings seen later are the results of pressure-driven close-packing.  相似文献   

18.
Three somewhat different types of particle accumulate in cells infected with a phage carrying a mutation in gene 21 (in addition to the tubular variant (polyhead) of the head). The major type is the so-called τ-particle. These particles are very fragile, associated with the cell membrane, and have a sedimentation coefficient of about 420 S. They possess no DNA if isolated, and contain predominantly the precursor proteins P23, P24, P22 and the internal protein IP III, in addition to protein P20 and several proteins of unknown genetic origin.The remainder of the particles are partially or completely filled with DNA. The ratio of τ-particles to these partially or completely filled particles depends upon the particular mutant (in gene 21) phage used. In cells infected with a phage carrying the amber mutation (N90) in gene 21, about 10% of the precursor head protein P23 is cleaved to P231, and correspondingly about 10% of the particles are partially or completely filled with DNA. In cells infected with the temperature-sensitive mutant (N8) in gene 21, about 1% of the particles are fully or partially filled, and correspondingly about 1% of the P23 is cleaved to P231. In either case, the DNA-associated particles contain predominantly the cleaved proteins P231 and IP III1, and have none of the P22 and IP III found in τ-particles. This observation, and the correlation of the amount of partially or completely filled particles with the extent of the cleavage of P23 in the lysates, strongly suggest that cleavage of the head proteins is required for DNA packaging to occur.The τ-particles have properties similar to the so-called prohead I particles which we have isolated as intermediates in wild-type head assembly (preceding paper). However, temperature shift-down experiments, using several different phage carrying temperature-sensitive mutations in gene 21, indicate that the bulk of the τ-particles cannot be used for normal phage production.  相似文献   

19.
Formation of genetic recombinants in bacteriophage φX174 is stimulated up to 50-fold in host cells carrying the recA+ allele by subjecting the virus particles to ultraviolet irradiation before infection, or by starving the host cell for thymine during infection; in recA host strains no such increases are observed.φX174 replicative form DNA molecules formed in vivo from ultraviolet-irradiated bacteriophage consist of an intact, circular full-length viral (+) strand and a partially complete complementary (?) strand extending from the point of origin of complementary strand DNA synthesis to an ultraviolet lesion. φX174 replicative form DNA molecules formed in thymine-deficient host strains during thymine starvation have nearly complete circular viral (+) and complementary (?) strands, which contain random single-strand nicks or gaps.Correlation of these structures with the observed increases in recombination suggests that single-strand “breaks” are aggressive intermediate structures in the formation of φX174 genetic recombinants mediated by the host recA+ gene product.  相似文献   

20.
Gene 2 amber mutants of bacteriophage T4 grown on su? hosts produce whole particles of which less than 0.5% are infective on su+ hosts. Although the DNA of such particles is full-sized and un-nicked, it is degraded to acid-soluble fragments after infection of exo V+ hosts. This breakdown does not occur on exo V? deficient hosts, and such hosts are fully permissive for gene 2-defective particles. We have now determined that giant-headed, gene 2-defective particles containing several genome lengths of DNA per head are fully infective on exo V+ hosts even though part of the parental DNA is degraded to acid-soluble fragments early after infection. Restriction of gene 2-defective particles must therefore be due to exonucleolytic degradation of the incoming DNA. If the parental DNA is of sufficient length to enable a complete genome to survive this degradation before production of anti-exoV, such particles are now infective.  相似文献   

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