首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
The region of temperate bacteriophage T12 responsible for integration into the chromosome of Streptococcus pyogenes has been identified. The integrase gene ( int ) and the phage attachment site ( attP ) are found immediately upstream of the gene for speA , the latter of which is known to be responsible for the production of erythrogenic toxin A (also known as pyrogenic exotoxin A). The integrase gene has a coding capacity for a protein of 41 457 Da, and the C-terminus of the deduced protein is similar to other conserved C-terminal regions typical of phage integrases. Upstream of int is a second open reading frame, which is capable of encoding an acidic protein of 72 amino acids (8744 Da); the position of this region in relation to int suggests it to be the phage excisionase gene ( xis ). The arms flanking the integrated prophage ( attL and attR ) were identified, allowing determination of the sequences of the phage ( attP ) and bacterial ( attB ) attachment sites. A fragment containing the integrase gene and attP was cloned into a streptococcal suicide vector; when introduced into S. pyogenes by electrotransformation, this plasmid stably integrated into the bacterial chromosome at attB . The insertion site for the phage into the S. pyogenes chromosome was found to be in the anticodon loop of a putative type II gene for a serine tRNA. attP and attB share a region of identity that is 96 bp in length; this region of identity corresponds to the 3' end of the tRNA gene such that the coding sequence remains intact after integration of the prophage. The symmetry of the core region of att may set this region apart from previously described phage attachment sites (Campbell, 1992), and may play a role in the biology of this medically important bacteriophage.  相似文献   

2.
Temperate Myxococcus xanthus phage Mx8 integrates into the attB locus of the M. xanthus genome. The phage attachment site, attP, is required in cis for integration and lies within the int (integrase) coding sequence. Site-specific integration of Mx8 alters the 3' end of int to generate the modified intX gene, which encodes a less active form of integrase with a different C terminus. The phage-encoded (Int) form of integrase promotes attP x attB recombination more efficiently than attR x attB, attL x attB, or attB x attB recombination. The attP and attB sites share a common core. Sequences flanking both sides of the attP core within the int gene are necessary for attP function. This information shows that the directionality of the integration reaction depends on arm sequences flanking both sides of the attP core. Expression of the uoi gene immediately upstream of int inhibits integrative (attP x attB) recombination, supporting the idea that uoi encodes the Mx8 excisionase. Integrase catalyzes a reaction that alters the primary sequence of its gene; the change in the primary amino acid sequence of Mx8 integrase resulting from the reaction that it catalyzes is a novel mechanism by which the reversible, covalent modification of an enzyme is used to regulate its specific activity. The lower specific activity of the prophage-encoded IntX integrase acts to limit excisive site-specific recombination in lysogens carrying a single Mx8 prophage, which are less immune to superinfection than lysogens carrying multiple, tandem prophages. Thus, this mechanism serves to regulate Mx8 site-specific recombination and superinfection immunity coordinately and thereby to preserve the integrity of the lysogenic state.  相似文献   

3.
Temperate phage mv4 integrates its DNA into the chromosome of Lactobacillus delbrueckii subsp. bulgaricus strains via site-specific recombination. Nucleotide sequencing of a 2.2-kb attP-containing phage fragment revealed the presence of four open reading frames. The larger open reading frame, close to the attP site, encoded a 427-amino-acid polypeptide with similarity in its C-terminal domain to site-specific recombinases of the integrase family. Comparison of the sequences of attP, bacterial attachment site attB, and host-phage junctions attL and attR identified a 17-bp common core sequence, where strand exchange occurs during recombination. Analysis of the attB sequence indicated that the core region overlaps the 3' end of a tRNA(Ser) gene. Phage mv4 DNA integration into the tRNA(Ser) gene preserved an intact tRNA(Ser) gene at the attL site. An integration vector based on the mv4 attP site and int gene was constructed. This vector transforms a heterologous host, L. plantarum, through site-specific integration into the tRNA(Ser) gene of the genome and will be useful for development of an efficient integration system for a number of additional bacterial species in which an identical tRNA gene is present.  相似文献   

4.
Integration of the bacteriophage P2 genome into the Escherichia coli host chromosome occurs by site-specific recombination between the phage attP and E. coli attB sites. The phage-encoded 38-kDa protein, integrase, is known to be necessary for both phage integration as well as excision. In order to begin the molecular characterization of this recombination event, we have cloned the int gene and overproduced and partially purified the Int protein and an N-terminal truncated form of Int. Both the wild-type Int protein and the integration host factor (IHF) of E. coli were required to mediate integrative recombination in vitro between a supercoiled attP plasmid and a linear attB substrate. Footprint experiments revealed one Int-protected region on both of the attP arms, each containing direct repeats of the consensus sequence TGTGGACA. The common core sequences at attP and attB were also protected by Int from nuclease digestion, and these contained a different consensus sequence, AA T/A T/A C/A T/G CCC, arranged as inverted repeats at each core. A single IHF-protected site was located on the P (left) arm, placed between the core- and P arm-binding site for Int. Cooperative binding by Int and IHF to the attP region was demonstrated with band-shift assays and footprinting studies. Our data support the existence of two DNA-binding domains on Int, having unrelated sequence specificities. We propose that P2 Int, IHF, attP, and attB assemble in a higher-order complex, or intasome, prior to site-specific integrative recombination analogous to that formed during lambda integration.  相似文献   

5.
The plasmid pCI6, carrying the attP site of the temperate phage phiU, integrates into the attB site on the chromosome of Rhizobium leguminosarum biovar trifolii strain 4S. The 4 kb EcoRI-HindIII region of pCI6 involved in site-specific integration was subcloned as the attP fragment of phage phiU and sequenced. The attL fragment, one of the new DNA junctions generated from the insertion of pCI6 into the chromosome of the host Rhizobium, was used as a hybridization probe for isolation of the attB fragment of strain 4S. The nucleotide sequence of the 2 kb PstI fragment of strain 4S, which hybridized with the attL fragment, was decided and compared with that of the attP fragment. A 53 bp common sequence was expected to be the core sequence of site-specific integration between phage phiU and strain 4S. One of the ORFs on the attP fragment, which was located adjacent to the core sequence, had structural homology to the integrase family. However, the attB fragment showed high homology with the tRNA genes of Agrobacterium tumefaciens and E. coli. A 47 bp sequence of the 53 bp core sequence overlapped with this tRNA-like sequence. This indicates that the target site of phage phiU integration is the putative tRNA gene on the chromosome of the Rhizobium host.  相似文献   

6.
Like most temperate bacteriophages, phage Mx8 integrates into a preferred locus on the genome of its host, Myxococcus xanthus, by a mechanism of site-specific recombination. The Mx8 int-attP genes required for integration map within a 2.2-kilobase-pair (kb) fragment of the phage genome. When this fragment is subcloned into a plasmid vector, it facilitates the site-specific integration of the plasmid into the 3' ends of either of two tandem tRNAAsp genes, trnD1 and trnD2, located within the attB locus of the M. xanthus genome. Although Int-mediated site-specific recombination occurs between attP and either attB1 (within trnD1) or attB2 (within trnD2), the attP x attB1 reaction is highly favored and often is accompanied by a deletion between attB1 and attB2. The int gene is the only Mx8 gene required in trans for attP x attB recombination. The int promoter lies within the 106-bp region immediately upstream of one of two alternate GTG start codons, GTG-5208 (GTG at bp 5208) and GTG-5085, for integrase and likely is repressed in the prophage state. All but the C-terminal 30 amino acid residues of the Int protein are required for its ability to mediate attP x attB recombination efficiently. The attP core lies within the int coding sequence, and the product of integration is a prophage in which the 3' end of int is replaced by host sequences. The prophage intX gene is predicted to encode an integrase with a different C terminus.  相似文献   

7.
The temperate phage mv4 integrates its genome into the chromosome of Lactobacillus delbrueckii subsp. bulgaricus by site-specific recombination within the 3' end of a tRNA(Ser) gene. Recombination is catalyzed by the phage-encoded integrase and occurs between the phage attP site and the bacterial attB site. In this study, we show that the mv4 integrase functions in vivo in Escherichia coli and we characterize the bacterial attB site with a site-specific recombination test involving compatible plasmids carrying the recombination sites. The importance of particular nucleotides within the attB sequence was determined by site-directed mutagenesis. The structure of the attB site was found to be simple but rather unusual. A 16-bp DNA fragment was sufficient for function. Unlike most genetic elements that integrate their DNA into tRNA genes, none of the dyad symmetry elements of the tRNA(Ser) gene were present within the minimal attB site. No inverted repeats were detected within this site either, in contrast to the lambda site-specific recombination model.  相似文献   

8.
The integrase protein of the Rhizobium meliloti 41 phage 16-3 has been classified as a member of the Int family of tyrosine recombinases. The site-specific recombination system of the phage belongs to the group in which the target site of integration (attB) is within a tRNA gene. Since tRNA genes are conserved, we expected that the target sequence of the site-specific recombination system of the 16-3 phage could occur in other species and integration could take place if the required putative host factors were also provided by the targeted cells. Here we report that a plasmid (pSEM167) carrying the attP element and the integrase gene (int) of the phage can integrate into the chromosomes of R. meliloti 1021 and eight other species. In all cases integration occurred at so-far-unidentified, putative proline tRNA (CGG) genes, indicating the possibility of their common origin. Multiple alignment of the sequences suggested that the location of the att core was different from that expected previously. The minimal attB was identified as a 23-bp sequence corresponding to the anticodon arm of the tRNA.  相似文献   

9.
The integrase gene (int) on the genome of φFSW, which is a temperate bacteriophage of Lactobacillus casei strain Shirota (formerly denoted as S-1), and the four attachment sites on the genomes of the phage and its host were characterized by sequencing. The φFSW integrase was found to belong to the integrase family of site-specific tyrosine recombinase. The attachment sites shared a 40bp common core within which an integrative site-specific recombination occurs. The common core was flanked on one side by an additional segment of high sequence similarity. An integration plasmid, consisting of int, the phage attachment site (attP), and a selectable marker, inserted stably into the bacterial attachment site (attB) within the common core, as did the complete prophage genome at a frequency of more than 10(3)/microg of plasmid DNA. This plasmid was used as a test system for a preliminary mutational analysis of int and attP. The attB common core was located within and near the end of an open reading frame that appears to encode a homolog to glucose 6-phosphate isomerase, an enzyme of the glycolytic pathway. It is unlikely that the prophage integration inactivates this protein, since a change of only the C-terminal amino acid is predicted because of the sequence similarity between attP and attB.  相似文献   

10.
We report identification of a novel site-specific DNA recombination system that functions in both in vivo and in vitro, derived from lysogenic Staphylococcus aureus phage phiMR11. In silico analysis of the phiMR11 genome indicated orf1 as a putative integrase gene. Phage and bacterial attachment sites (attP and attB, respectively) and attachment junctions were determined and their nucleotide sequences decoded. Sequences of attP and attB were mostly different to each other except for a two bp common core that was the crossover point. We found several inverted repeats adjacent to the core sequence of attP as potential protein binding sites. The precise and efficient integration properties of phiMR11 integrase were shown on attP and attB in Escherichia coli and the minimum size of attP was found to be 34bp. In in vitro assays using crude or purified integrase, only buffer and substrate DNAs were required for the recombination reaction, indicating that other bacterially encoded factors are not essential for activity.  相似文献   

11.
Integration of bacteriophage P2 into the Escherichia coli genome involves recombination between two attachment sites, attP and attB, one on the phage and one on the host genome, respectively. At least 10 different attB sites have been identified over the years. In E. coli C, one site, called locI, is preferred, being occupied before any of the others. In E. coli K-12, no such preference is seen (reviewed in L. E. Bertani and E. W. Six, p. 73-143, in R. Calendar, ed., The Bacteriophages, vol. 2, 1988). The DNA sequence of locI has been determined, and it shows a core sequence of 27 nucleotides identical to attP (A. Yu, L. E. Bertani, and E. Hagg?rd-Ljungquist, Gene 80:1-12, 1989). By inverse polymerase chain reactions, the prophage-host junctions of DNA extracted from P2 lysogenic strains have been amplified, cloned, and sequenced. By combining the attL and attR sequences, the attB sequences of locations II, III, and H have been deduced. The core sequence of location II had 20 matches to the 27-nucleotide core sequence of attP; the sequences of locations III and H had 17 matches. Thus, the P2 integrase accepts at least up to 37% mismatches within the core sequence. The E. coli K-12 strains examined all contain a 639-nucleotide-long cryptic remnant of P2 at a site with a sequence similar to that of locI but that may have a different map position. The P2 remnant consists of the C-terminal part of gene D, all of gene ogr, and attR. Locations II, III, and H have been located on Kohara's physical map to positions 3670, 1570 to 1575, and 2085, respectively.  相似文献   

12.
Spontaneous deletion mutants of the temperate lactococcal bacteriophage BK5-T were obtained when the phage was grown vegetatively on the indicator strain Lactococcus lactis subsp. cremoris H2. One deletion mutant was unable to form stable lysogens, and analysis of this mutant led to the identification of the BK5-T attP site and the integrase gene (int). The core sequences of the BK5-T attP and host attB regions are conserved in a number of lactococcal phages and L. lactis strains.  相似文献   

13.
Phage R4 integrase mediates site-specific integration in human cells.   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
E C Olivares  R P Hollis  M P Calos 《Gene》2001,278(1-2):167-176
The R4 integrase is a site-specific, unidirectional recombinase derived from the genome of phage R4 of Streptomyces parvulus. Here we define compact attB and attP recognition sites for the R4 integrase and express the enzyme in mammalian cells. We demonstrate that R4 integrase functions in human cells, performing efficient and precise recombination between R4 attB and attP sites cloned on an extrachromosomal vector. We also provide evidence that the enzyme can mediate integration of an incoming plasmid bearing an attB or attP site into endogenous sequences in the human genome. Furthermore, when R4 attB and attP sites are placed into the human genome, either by random integration or at a specific sequence by using the phi C31 integrase, they act as targets for integration of incoming plasmids bearing R4 att sites. The R4 integrase has immediate utility as a site-specific integration tool for genome engineering, as well as potential for further development.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Although the lambdoid bacteriophage phi 80 and P22 possess site-specific recombination systems analogous to bacteriophage lambda, they have different attachment (att) site specificities. We have identified and determined the nucleotide sequences of the att sites of phi 80 and P22 and have examined the interaction of these sites with purified Escherichia coli integration host factor (IHF). The sizes of the homologous core regions of the att sites vary greatly: P22 has a 46-base pair core, while phi 80 and lambda have 17- and 15-base pair cores, respectively. The core sequences of the three phage show no significant homology, although dispersed regions of homology in arm sequences indicate that the three phage att sites are related. All three att sites have a high A + T composition, and restriction fragments carrying these sites migrate anomalously upon polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. IHF binds to a site to the left of the common core in the phi 80 and P22 phage att sites (attP) and to a site to the right of the core in P22 attP and attB (the bacterial att site). In the lambda system, IHF interacts with three regions on attP (designated H1, H2, and H') and none on attB (Craig N., and Nash, H.A. (1984) Cell 39, 707-716). Alignment of the IHF sites of all three phage results in a consensus sequence for IHF binding, Pyr-AANNNNTTGATAT. Among the three phage, the number of IHF sites differs; however, the location and orientation of the binding sites in relation to the respective core regions are well conserved. An IHF site analogous to lambda H2 is present in both phi 80 and P22 attP, while a site analogous to lambda H' is present in P22 attP. This conservation suggests that IHF plays a very similar role in the site-specific recombination pathways of all three phage, and that the flanking arm sequences are necessary for phi 80 and P22 attP function, as is the case for lambda attP function. These structural similarities presumably reflect a conservation of the mechanism of site-specific recombination for the three phage.  相似文献   

16.
Bacteriophage phiFC1 integrase (MJ1) was previously shown to perform a site-specific recombination between a phage attachment site (attP) and a host attachment site (attB) in its host, Enterococcus faecalis, and also in a non-host bacterium, Escherichia coli. Here, we investigated biochemical features of MJ1 integrase. First, MJ1 integrase could perform in vitro recombination between attP and attB in the absence of additional factors. Second, MJ1 integrase interacted with att sites. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays and DNase I footprinting revealed that MJ1 integrase could efficiently bind to all the att sites and that MJ1 integrase recognized relatively short sequences (approximately 50 bp) containing an overlapping region within attB and attP. These results demonstrate that MJ1 integrase indeed catalyzes an integrative recombination between attP and attB, the mechanism of which might be simple and unidirectional, as found in serine integrases.  相似文献   

17.
Phage 16-3 is a temperate phage of Rhizobium meliloti 41 which integrates its genome with high efficiency into the host chromosome by site-specific recombination through DNA sequences of attB and attP. Here we report the identification of two phage-encoded genes required for recombinations at these sites: int (phage integration) and xis (prophage excision). We concluded that Int protein of phage 16-3 belongs to the integrase family of tyrosine recombinases. Despite similarities to the cognate systems of the lambdoid phages, the 16-3 int xis att system is not active in Escherichia coli, probably due to requirements for host factors that differ in Rhizobium meliloti and E. coli. The application of the 16-3 site-specific recombination system in biotechnology is discussed.  相似文献   

18.
CTXphi is a filamentous bacteriophage that encodes cholera toxin and integrates site-specifically into the larger of the two Vibrio cholerae chromosomes. The CTXphi genome lacks an integrase; instead, its integration depends on the chromosome-encoded tyrosine recombinases XerC and XerD. During integration, recombination occurs between regions of homology in CTXphi and the V. cholerae chromosome. Here, we define the elements on the phage genome (attP) and bacterial chromosome (attB) required for CTXphi integration. attB is a short sequence composed of one binding site for XerC and XerD spanning the site of recombination. Together, XerC and XerD bind to two sites within attP. While one XerC/D binding site in attP spans the core recombination region, the other site is approximately 80 bp away. Although integration occurs at the core XerC/D binding site in attP, the second site is required for CTXphi integration, suggesting it performs an architectural role in the integration reaction. In vitro cleavage reactions showed that XerC and XerD are capable of cleaving attB and attP sequences; however, additional cellular processes such as DNA replication or Holliday junction resolution by a host resolvase may contribute to integration in vivo.  相似文献   

19.
The genetic elements required for the integration of the temperate lactococcal bacteriophage phi LC3 into the chromosome of its bacterial host, Lactococcus lactis subsp. cremoris, were identified and characterized. The phi LC3 phage attachment site, attP, was mapped and sequenced. DNA sequence analysis of attP and of the bacterial attachment site, attB, as well as the two phage-host junctions, attR and attL, in the chromosome of a phi LC3 lysogen, identified a 9-bp common core region, 5'-TTCTTCATG'-3, within which the strand exchange reaction takes place during integration. The attB core sequence is located within the C-terminal part of an open reading frame of unknown function. The phi LC3 integrase gene (int), encoding the phi LC3 site-specific recombinase, was identified and is located adjacent to attP. The phi LC3 Int protein, as deduced from the nucleotide sequence, is a basic protein of 374 amino acids that shares significant sequence similarity with other site-specific recombinases of the integrase family. Phage phi LC3 int- and int-attP-defective mutants, conferring an abortive lysogenic phenotype, were constructed.  相似文献   

20.
The integrase from the Streptomyces phage (phi)C31 is a member of the serine recombinase family of site-specific recombinases and is fundamentally different from that of lambda or its relatives. Moreover, (phi)C31 int/attP is used widely as an essential component of integration vectors (such as pSET152) employed in the genetic analysis of Streptomyces species. phiC31 or integrating plasmids containing int/attP have been shown previously to integrate at a locus, attB, in the chromosome. The DNA sequences of the attB sites of various Streptomyces species revealed nonconserved positions. In particular, the crossover site was narrowed to the sequence 5'TT present in both attP and attB. Strains of Streptomyces coelicolor and S. lividans were constructed with a deletion of the attB site ((Delta)attB), and pSET152 was introduced into these strains by conjugation. Thus, secondary or pseudo-attB sites were identified by Southern blotting and after rescue of plasmids containing DNA flanking the insertion sites from the chromosome. The sequences of the integration sites had similarity to those of attB. Analysis of the insertions of pSET152 into both attB(+) and (Delta)attB strains indicated that this plasmid can integrate at several loci via independent recombination events within a transconjugant.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号