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1.
The maturation and packaging of bacteriophage lambda DNA are under the control of the multifunctional viral terminase enzyme, which is composed of the protein products of Nu1 and A, the two most leftward genes of the phage chromosome. Terminase binds selectively to the cohesive end site (cos) of multimeric replicating lambda DNA and introduces staggered nicks to regenerate the 12-base single-stranded cohesive ends of the mature phage genome. The purified gpNu1 subunit of terminase forms specific complexes with cos lambda DNA. DNase I footprinting experiments showed that gpNu1 bound to three distinct regions near the extreme left end of the lambda chromosome. These regions coincided with two 16-base-pair sequences (CTGTCGTTTCCTTTCT) that were in inverted orientation, as well as a truncated version of this sequence. Bear et al. (J. Virol. 52:966-972,1984) isolated a mutant phage which contained a CG to TA transition at the 10th position of the rightmost 16-base-pair sequence, and this phage (termed lambda cos 154) exhibits a defect in DNA maturation when it replicates in Escherichia coli which is deficient in integration host factor. Footprinting experiments with cos 154 DNA showed that gpNu1 could not bind to the site which contained the mutation but could protect the other two sites. Since the DNA-packaging specificity of terminase resides in the gpNu1 subunit, these studies suggest that terminase uses these three sites as recognition sequences for specific binding to cos lambda.  相似文献   

2.
R R Higgins  A Becker 《The EMBO journal》1994,13(24):6162-6171
lambda terminase is an ATP-interactive, site-specific endonuclease comprising the products of lambda genes Nu1 and A. Terminase binds to cos, at the junction of two chromosomes in a concatemer, catalyzes cos cleavage and initiates the packaging of lambda DNA into proheads. cos consists of a nicking domain, cosN, where terminase cleaves to regenerate the 12 nucleotide cohesive ends of mature lambda chromosomes and a binding domain, cosB, where terminase binds to 16 bp repeat sequences called R3, R2 and R1. Evidence is presented that terminase is a single-strand endonuclease that can nick DNA by one of two mechanisms, both of which require ATP. (i) When bound to any R site, terminase nicks the strand which, within that R site, is purine-rich; the position of this nick is 47 +/- 2 nucleotides away from the mid-point of that R site, measured in the 3' direction; (ii) enzymes that are not bound to R sites nick DNA within certain specific sequences that resemble cosN half sites. These two modes of action are nicely combined for the R3-bound protomer that nicks the bottom strand at position N1 in cosN since the interval between N1 and the R3 midpoint is 47 nucleotides. Within cosN, the bottom and top strand nicks are generated by a rigid protein couple with a 2-fold rotational symmetry. The location of both of these nicks, however, is gauged asymmetrically from R3, 47 nucleotides away. Again, R1 and R2 are separated by 47 bp and orient bound protomers towards each other but, unless the DNA between these R sites is lengthened, the enzymes do not nick, indicating an inhibitory gpA-gpNu1 apposition.  相似文献   

3.
The lambda terminase enzyme binds to the cohesive end sites (cos) of multimeric replicating lambda DNA and introduces staggered nicks to regenerate the 12 bp single-stranded cohesive ends of the mature phage genome. In vitro this endonucleolytic cleavage requires spermidine, magnesium ions, ATP and a host factor. One of the E. coli proteins which can fulfill this latter requirement is Integration Host Factor (IHF). IHF and the gpNu1 subunit of terminase can bind simultaneously to their own specific binding sites at cos. DNase I footprinting experiments suggest that IHF may promote gpNu1 binding. Although no specific gpNu1 binding to the left side of cos can be detected, this DNA segment does play a specific role since a cos fragment that does not include the left side or whose left side is replaced by non-cos sequences, is unable to bind gpNu1 unless either spermidine or IHF is present. Binding studies on the right side of cos using individual or combinations of gpNu1 binding sites I, II and III indicate that binding at sites I and II is not optimal unless site III is present.  相似文献   

4.
G Shinder  W Parris    M Gold 《Nucleic acids research》1988,16(7):2765-2785
Terminase Host Factor (THF), an E. coli protein capable of fulfilling the host factor requirement for in vitro bacteriophage lambda terminase activity, displays properties characteristic of the prokaryotic type II DNA-binding or "histone-like" proteins. It is a 22 K basic, heat- and acid-stable protein which binds non-specifically to various DNAs. Conditions can be established, however, where THF binds preferentially to the cohesive end site (cos) of lambda DNA forming several distinct complexes as visualized by band retardation in polyacrylamide gels. DNase I footprinting reveals that THF can protect several regions of the top strand on the right side (+) of cos but does not bind as well to the left side (-). The binding regions are separated either by unprotected or by DNase I- hypersensitive bases. Under the conditions used in these experiments, DNA which does not contain cos lambda sequences does not show this pattern of protection. Several repeated motifs in the cos lambda nucleotide sequence may represent a consensus sequence for THF interaction. THF may be similar to other "histone-like" proteins which display both non-specific and selective DNA-binding capacities.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Bacteriophage lambda chromosomes are packaged in a polarized, sequential fashion from a multimeric DNA substrate. Mature chromosomes are generated when terminase introduces staggered nicks in the cohesive end sites (cos sites) bounding a chromosome. Packaging is polarized, to the initial and terminal cos sites for packaging a chromosome can be defined. To initiate packaging, terminase binds to cos at cosB, and subsequently cuts at cosN. To terminate packaging of a chromosome, a functional cosB is not required at the terminal cos. To explain this finding, it was proposed earlier that terminase scans for the terminal cosN, rather than any subsequent cosB, during packaging. In the work described here we performed helper packaging experiments to see whether processive action of terminase occurs during sequential packaging of lambda chromosomes. The helper packaging experiments involve trilysogens; strains carrying three prophages in tandem. Infection by a hetero-immune helper phage results in packaging of the repressed prophage chromosomes, since the prophage structure is analogous to the normal DNA substrate. Two chromosomes can be packaged from between the three cos sites of the prophages of a trilysogen. Both chromosomes are packaged even when the central cos is cosB-. Our interpretation of these data is that terminase is brought to the central cos by packaging; following cleavage of the central cos, the terminase remains bound to the distal chromosome; and terminase acts to begin packaging of the distal chromosome. The frequency at which terminase reads across the central cos to initiate packaging of the distal chromosome is in the range from 0.3 to 0.5 in our experiments. Reading across cos was found not to be greatly dependent on the state of cosB, indicating that cosB binding is only needed for packaging the first chromosome in a packaging series. A multilysogen was constructed in which the initial cos was cos+ and the distal cos sites were all cosB-. The initial and downstream chromosomes were found to be packaged. This result indicates that terminase that is brought to the central cos by packaging is not only able to initiate packaging of a downstream chromosome, but can also scan and terminate packaging of the downstream chromosome. A model is presented in which processive action of terminase is the basis for sequential packaging of lambda chromosomes.  相似文献   

7.
Terminases are enzymes common to complex double-stranded DNA viruses and are required for packaging of viral DNA into a protective capsid. Bacteriophage lambda terminase holoenzyme is a hetero-oligomer composed of the A and Nu1 lambda gene products; however, the self-association properties of the holoenzyme have not been investigated systematically. Here, we report the results of sedimentation velocity, sedimentation equilibrium, and gel-filtration experiments studying the self-association properties of the holoenzyme. We find that purified, recombinant lambda terminase forms a homogeneous, heterotrimeric structure, consisting of one gpA molecule associated with two gpNu1 molecules (114.2 kDa). We further show that lambda terminase adopts a heterogeneous mixture of higher-order structures, with an average molecular mass of 528(+/-34) kDa. Both the heterotrimer and the higher-order species possess site-specific cos cleavage activity, as well as DNA packaging activity; however, the heterotrimer is dependent upon Escherichia coli integration host factor (IHF) for these activities. Furthermore, the ATPase activity of the higher-order species is approximately 1000-fold greater than that of the heterotrimer. These data suggest that IHF bending of the duplex at the cos site in viral DNA promotes the assembly of the heterotrimer into a biologically active, higher-order packaging motor. We propose that a single, higher-order hetero-oligomer of gpA and gpNu1 functions throughout lambda development.  相似文献   

8.
M Feiss  W Widner  G Miller  G Johnson  S Christiansen 《Gene》1983,24(2-3):207-218
The extents of the sites for nicking (cosN) and binding (cosB) of bacteriophage lambda DNA by terminase have been determined by studying cos cleavage and terminase binding in vitro. The cosN site is located in the segment from -22 to +24 bp (numbered from the center of the cohesive end sequence in the circular lambda genome). The cosB site is located in the segment from +51 to +120 (the +120 boundary determined by Miwa and Matsubara, 1983). Additional sequences are necessary for packaging into infectious phage particles, including regions to the left (Rz gene side) of cosN, and between cosN and cosB. Small deletions (7 and 11 bp) between cosN and cosB abolish packaging in vivo without affecting cos binding and cleavage in vitro, whereas a large deletion (26 bp) abolishes packaging in vivo and cleavage in vitro.  相似文献   

9.
The Nu1 subunit of bacteriophage lambda terminase   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The maturation and packaging of bacteriophage lambda DNA are catalyzed by the phage terminase enzyme. Terminase is composed of two protein subunits, gpNu1 and gpA. The holoenzyme is multifunctional in vitro; it binds to and cleaves lambda DNA at the cos site (where cos represents cohesive-end site), packages DNA into lambda proheads, and is also a DNA-dependent ATPase. The genes of the two subunits have been cloned separately into powerful expression vectors which allow for very high levels of protein overproduction. The gpNu1 protein has been purified to homogeneity and has a monomeric molecular weight of 21,200, in close agreement with the Mr of 20,444 expected from its amino acid sequence. Both gel filtration and sedimentation velocity centrifugation indicate that the native gpNu1 protein exists as a Mr greater than 500,000 aggregate. The sequence of the first 20 amino acids and the overall composition both match those predicted by the nucleotide sequence of the Nu1 gene. Purified gpNu1 is able to complement gpA-containing extracts in both lambda DNA packaging and cos cleavage assays. The Nu1 gene amino acid sequence predicts DNA binding by the protein, and gpNu1 does show specific binding to lambda DNA by filter binding assays. Also, as predicted from its sequence, gpNu1 exhibits ATPase activity; but in contrast to the holoenzyme, this activity is DNA-independent.  相似文献   

10.
Bacteriophage lambda grows lytically on Escherichia coli defective for integration host factor, a protein involved in lambda site-specific recombination and the regulation of gene expression. We report the characterization of a mutant, lambda cos154, that, unlike wild-type lambda, is defective for growth in integration host factor-defective E. coli. The cis-dominant mutation in lambda cos154 is a single base pair change in a region of hyphenated dyad symmetry close to the lambda left cohesive end; this mutation prevents DNA packaging. We propose the following two alternative roles for this site in lambda DNA packaging: (i) to bind an E. coli accessory protein required in the absence of integration host factor or (ii) to bind the phage-encoded terminase protein that is essential for DNA packaging.  相似文献   

11.
The protein components required for generation of cohesive ends in vitro from circular bacteriophage P2 DNA have been purified to near homogeneity. In the presence of ATP, the purified products of P2 genes M and P together with empty phage capsids (comprised primarily of the N protein) mediate site-specific cleavage of circular P2 DNA at the cohesive end site (cos). This terminase or ter system also utilizes circular DNAs of bacteriophages P4 and 186, introducing site-specific scissions at cos sites within these molecules. The ter reaction exhibits a peculiar requirement for a circular DNA substrate. Substrate activity is greatly reduced when circular P2, P4, or 186 DNAs are linearized by restriction endonuclease hydrolysis. Furthermore, multimeric P4 DNA molecule sites are also essentially inactive in the linear form but are active in the circular state. The dependence of ter action on a circular substrate is not due to inhibition of the system by linear DNA, nor does it appear to reflect a requirement for substrate superhelicity since circular P4 DNA containing single strand scissions is subject to terminase action. The terminase reaction is supported by ATP, dATP, or beta, gamma-imido ATP, but not by other ribonucleoside triphosphates ADP, alpha, beta-methylene ATP, or beta, gamma-methylene ATP. A DNA-dependent ATPase, which hydrolyzes ATP to AMP, copurifies with the P2 P protein and is inactivated with the same kinetics as P activity upon treatment with N-ethylmaleimide. The ATPase does not display specificity for P2 DNA in vitro.  相似文献   

12.
cosB, the binding site for terminase, the DNA packaging enzyme of bacteriophage lambda, consists of three binding sites (called R3, R2 and R1) for gpNu1, the small subunit of terminase; and I1, a binding site for integration host factor (IHF), the DNA bending protein of Escherichia coli. cosB is located between cosN, the site where terminase introduces staggered nicks to generate cohesive ends, and the Nu1 gene; the order of sites is: cosN-R3-I1-R2-R1-Nu1. A series of lambda mutants have been constructed that have single base-pair C-to-T transition mutations in R3, R2 and R1. A single base-pair transition mutation within any one of the gpNul binding sites renders lambda dependent upon IHF for plaque formation. lambda phage with mutations in both R2 and R3 are incapable of plaque formation even in the presence of IHF. Phages that carry DNA insertions between R1 and R2, from 7 to 20 base-pairs long, are also IHF-dependent, demonstrating the requirement for a precise spacing of gpNu1 binding sites within cosB. The IHF-dependent phenotype of a lambda mutant carrying a deletion of the R1 sequence indicates that IHF obviates the need for terminase binding to the R1 site. In contrast, a lambda mutant deleted for R2 and R1 fails to form plaques on either IHF+ or IHF- cells, indicating terminase binding of R2 is involved in suppression of R mutants by IHF. A fourth R sequence, R4, is situated on the left side of cosN; a phage with a mutant R4 sequence shows a reduced burst size on both an IHF+ and an IHF- host. The inability of the R4- mutant to be suppressed by IHF, plus the fact that R4 does not bind gpNu1, suggests R4 is not part of cosB and may play a role in DNA packaging that is distinct from that of cosB.  相似文献   

13.
The maturation of bacteriophage lambda DNA and its packaging into preformed heads to produce infectious phage is under the control of the two leftmost genes on the lambda chromosome, i.e., Nu1 and A. Based on its ability to complement lambda A- phage-infected cell extracts for packaging of lambda DNA in vitro, a single protein, designated terminase (ter) has been extensively purified using adsorption, ion exchange, and affinity column chromatography. The final preparation represents an approximately 60,000-fold purification over the activity found in crude extracts and is about 30 to 80% homogeneous as judged by visualizing the protein after electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel. In addition to packaging, terminase can also catalyze the endonucleolytic cleavage of lambda cohesive-end site DNA; both of these reactions require ATP. In some preparations, certain terminase fractions of extreme purity require protein factors present in extracts of uninfected Escherichia coli in order to catalyze the cohesive-end site cleavage reaction. On ion exchange columns purified terminase co-chromatographs with a DNA-dependent ATPase activity, hydrolyzing ATP to ADP and Pi in the presence of any of several types of DNA tested including those of non-lambda origin. The molecular weight of the native enzyme is 117,000 and appears to be a hetero-oligomer composed of 2 nonidentical subunits. The most likely composition of terminase is one gpA (gene product of A), Mr = 74,000 and two gpNu1, Mr = 21,000.  相似文献   

14.
Bacteriophage lambda with mutations in genes that control prohead assembly and other head precursors cannot mature their DNA. In this paper we present evidence that the failure of these phage mutants to mature DNA is a reflection of a mechanism that modulates terminase nicking activity during normal phage development. We have constructed plasmids that contain the lambda-cohesive end site (cos) and the genes that code for DNA terminase, the enzyme that matures DNA by cutting at cos. The DNA terminase genes are under control of a thermosensitive cI repressor. These plasmids lack most of the genes involved in prohead morphogenesis and other head precursors. However, when repression is lifted by destruction of the thermosensitive repressor, the terminase synthesized is able to cut almost 100% of the plasmids. Therefore, these plasmids can mature in the absence of proheads and other head gene products. The plasmids are also able to complement mutants of lambda deficient in terminase and DNA maturation. However, in these complementation experiments, if the phage carry mutations in prohead genes E or B, not only is phage DNA maturation blocked, but the plasmid also fails to mature. These experiments show that, in the absence of proheads, phage lambda produces a trans-acting inhibitor of maturation. The genetic determinant of this inhibitor maps in a region extending from the middle of gene B to the end of gene C. A model is proposed in which the nicking activity of DNA-bound terminase is inhibited by the trans-acting inhibitor. Prohead (and other factors) binding to this complex would release the block to allow DNA cleavage and packaging.  相似文献   

15.
A collection of mutations affecting the site (cosN) at which the bacteriophage lambda DNA packaging enzyme, terminase, introduces nicks to generate mature lambda chromosomes has been studied. A good correlation was found for mutational effects on burst size, accumulation of unused proheads, packaging of DNA into heads and cos cutting by terminase in vitro, indicating that defective cosN cleavage by terminase is the molecular explanation for the phenotypic effects of the mutations. Although the base-pairs of cosN display partial twofold rotational symmetry, cosN was found to be asymmetric functionally. Certain mutations to the left side of the center of rotational symmetry have more pronounced phenotypic effects than rotationally symmetric mutations to the right. The cosN11G mutation has no phenotypic effects when present as a single mutation, but does affect DNA packaging and cosN cutting in the presence of the symmetrically disposed cosN2C mutation. Mutations that decrease cosN cleavage result in the accumulation of unexpanded proheads, indicating that prohead expansion depends on cosN cutting.  相似文献   

16.
The control of lambda DNA terminase synthesis.   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
Nu1 and A, the genes coding for bacteriophage lambda DNA terminase, rank among the most poorly translated genes expressed in E. coli. To understand the reason for this low level of translation the genes were cloned into plasmids and their expression measured. In addition, the wild type DNA sequences immediately preceding the genes were reduced and modified. It was found that the elements that control translation are contained in the 100 base pairs upstream from the initiation codon. Interchanging these upstream sequences with those of an efficiently translated gene dramatically increased the translation of terminase subunits. It seems unlikely that the rare codons present in the genes, and any feature of their mRNA secondary structure play a role in the control of their translation. The elimination of cos from plasmids containing Nu1 and A also resulted in an increase in terminase production. This result suggests a role for cos in the control of late gene expression. The terminase subunit overproducer strains are potentially very useful for the design of improved DNA packaging and cosmid mapping techniques.  相似文献   

17.
J Q Hang  C E Catalano  M Feiss 《Biochemistry》2001,40(44):13370-13377
cosN is the site at which terminase, the DNA packaging enzyme of phage lambda, introduces staggered nicks into viral concatemeric DNA to initiate genome packaging. Although the nick positions and many of the base pairs of cosN show 2-fold rotational symmetry, cosN is functionally asymmetric. That is, the cosN G2C mutation in the left half-site (cosNL) causes a strong virus growth defect whereas the symmetrically disposed cosN C11G mutation in the right half-site (cosNR) does not affect virus growth. The experiments reported here test the proposal that the genetic asymmetry of cosN results from terminase interactions with cosB, a binding site to the right of cosN. In the presence of cosB, the left half-site mutation, cosN G2C, strongly affected the cos cleavage reaction, while the symmetric right half-site mutation, cosN C11G, had little effect. In the absence of cosB, the two mutations moderately reduced the rate of cos cleavage by the same amount. The results indicated that the functional asymmetry of cosNdepends on the presence of cosB. A model is discussed in which terminase-cosN interactions in the nicking complex are assisted by anchoring of terminase to cosB.  相似文献   

18.
R R Higgins  A Becker 《The EMBO journal》1994,13(24):6152-6161
The terminase enzyme of phage lambda is a site-specific endonuclease that nicks DNA concatemers to regenerate the 12 nucleotide cohesive ends of the mature chromosome. The enzyme's DNA target, cos, consists of a nicking domain, cosN, and a binding domain, cosB. cosB, situated to the right of cosN, comprises three 16 bp repeat sequences, R1, R2 and R3. A similar sequence, R4, is present to the left of cosN. It is shown here that terminase has an intrinsic specificity for cosN which is independent of the R sites. The interaction with cosN is mediated by binding to target sites that include 12 bp on the 5', and 2-7 bp on the 3' side of the nick. Of the four R sites, only R3 is required for the proper formation of ends. When R3 is present, an ATP-charged terminase system correctly catalyzes the production of staggered nicks in cosN, at sites N1 and N2 on the bottom and top strands, respectively. When ATP is omitted, the bottom strand is nicked incorrectly, at the site Nx, 8 bp to the left of N1. If R3 is removed or disabled by a point mutation, nicking in cosN becomes dependent upon ATP but, even in the presence of ATP, bottom strand nicking is divided between sites N1, the correct site, and Nx, the incorrect one. Thus, R3 is an important regulatory element and must reside in cis in respect to cosN. Furthermore, cosN substrates bearing point mutations at N1 and N2 are nicked at sites Nx and Ny, 8 bp to the left of N1 and N2, respectively. When R3 is present and ATP is added, nicking is redirected to the N1 and N2 positions despite the mutations present. Thus, terminase binding to R3, on one side of cosN, regulates the rotationally symmetric nicking reactions on the bottom and top strands within cosN.  相似文献   

19.
Z H Cai  Y Hwang  D Cue  C Catalano    M Feiss 《Journal of bacteriology》1997,179(8):2479-2485
The linear double-stranded DNA molecules in lambda virions are generated by nicking of concatemeric intracellular DNA by terminase, the lambda DNA packaging enzyme. Staggered nicks are introduced at cosN to generate the cohesive ends of virion DNA. After nicking, the cohesive ends are separated by terminase; terminase bound to the left end of the DNA to be packaged then binds the empty protein shell, i.e., the prohead, and translocation of DNA into the prohead occurs. cosB, a site adjacent to cosN, is a terminase binding site. cosB facilitates the rate and fidelity of the cosN cleavage reaction by serving as an anchoring point for gpNu1, the small subunit of terminase. cosB is also crucial for the formation of a stable terminase-DNA complex, called complex I, formed after cosN cleavage. The role of complex I is to bind the prohead. Mutations in cosB affect both cosB functions, causing mild defects in cosN cleavage and severe packaging defects. The lethal cosB R3- R2- R1- mutation contains a transition mutation in each of the three gpNu1 binding sites of cosB. Pseudorevertants of lambda cosB R3- R2- R1- DNA contain suppressor mutations affecting gpNu1. Results of experiments that show that two such suppressors, Nu1ms1 and Nu1ms3, do not suppress the mild cosN cleavage defect caused by the cosB R3- R2- R1- mutation but strongly suppress the DNA packaging defect are presented. It is proposed that the suppressing terminases, unlike the wild-type enzyme, are able to assemble a stable complex I with cosB R3- R2- R1- DNA. Observations on the adenosine triphosphatase activities and protease susceptibilities of gpNu1 of the Nu1ms1 and Nu1ms3 terminases indicate that the conformation of gpNu1 is altered in the suppressing terminases.  相似文献   

20.
The interaction of E. coli integration host factor (IHF) with the cohesive end sites (cos's) of phages lambda and 21 has been studied by the DNAase I footprinting technique. Six potential sites in cos lambda differ from the consensus IHF binding sequence by 1 to 3 base pairs. Of the six, one site, I1, binds IHF strongly. The I1 segment protected by IHF contains two sequences that closely match the IHF consensus binding sequence. Another site, I2, binds IHF moderately well, and three sites: 10', 13 and 14 bind IHF very weakly. The 10 site does not bind IHF under the conditions used here. In phage 21 the DNA segment extending to the right from the cohesive ends, which contains three potential IHF binding sites, was examined. Two sites bind IHF well; I1, the 21 analogue of one of the lambda I1 sites, and I0, a site not analogous to a lambda site. The third 21 site, I2, binds IHF moderately well, as does the analogous I2 site in lambda. The significance of the results for lambda DNA packaging is discussed.  相似文献   

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