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 nature of phage precursors in gene 13-defective infected cells was studied by electron microscopy and pulse-chase isotopic labeling experiments. Our results suggest that both stable (20%) and fragile (70%) filled-head precursors accumulated in the absence of gene 13 product. Upon extraction, the fragile heads were found to lose most of their deoxyribonucleic acid and appeared unfilled with an average density of 1.34 g/cm(3) and a sedimentation coefficient of 300S. These unfilled heads differed from empty gene 13-defective heads which did not have any associated deoxyribonucleic acid and banded at an average density of 1.31 g/cm(3). Furthermore, it was found that a tsN38 (temperature-sensitive mutant in gene 13)- infected culture maintained at 41.5 C for increasing times led to a decrease in specific infectivity of 1,000S phagelike particles. Electron microscopy of these particles revealed that the decreased infectivity was due to an improper union of head and tails.  相似文献   

2.
An investigation into the metabolic requirements for maturation of gene 49-defective heads indicated that adenosine triphosphate energy and continued deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) but not ribonucleic acid synthesis were needed. The fate of DNA present at restrictive temperatures (41.5 C) in tsC9 (gene 49)-infected cells was also examined. After lysis of infected cells, the 12 to 32% deoxyribonuclease-resistant DNA associated with isolated gene 49-defective heads was found to be attached to a deoxyribonuclease-sensitive complex associated with the debris. Pulsechase experiments where (3)H-thymidine was used to label the DNA at 41.5 C suggested that more DNA from this pool was present in phage recovered after rescue of the gene 49 function than could be accounted for by the deoxyribonuclease-resistant portion. Further, when these experiments were repeated with an additional density shift ((15)N(13)C-glucose to (14)N(12)C-glucose), the DNA extracted from phage rescued at 10 min after the temperature shift-down was found to be 90% conserved. These results suggest a model whereby DNA packaging into capsid precursors is separated from DNA replication and the energy from DNA synthesis provides the driving force for packaging. Pulse-chase, temperature-shift experiments with E920g (gene 66) or E920g;tsC9 mutant-infected cells showed that gene (49, 66)-defective heads, which were isolated as small, isometric-shaped unfilled heads, were a precursor to "petite" phage. This suggests that the maturation process is independent of the size and shape of the head membrane. Similar experiments with the double mutant tsC9;amN120 indicate that gene 49-defective heads can also be filled in the absence of tails.  相似文献   

3.
An estimate was made of the amount of DNA packaged into gene 49-defective heads when P49 is activated by a temperature shift. The uptake of DNA into preformed heads following activation of P49 was studied using bromo-deoxyuridine as a label. The rate of inactivation by visible light of the phage matured in the presence of BrdU as well as their buoyant density in CsCl, indicate that over half of the particles package, on the average, at least 25% of the DNA complement following P49 activation. This is a minimum estimate, since the BrdU-labeled DNA has to compete with unlabeled DNA. Analysis on alkaline sucrose gradients of the size of the DNA extracted from phage matured in the presence of BrdU following irradiation reveals that extended irradiation at 313 nm breaks the DNA close to half of its original size. These experiments clearly show that up to half of the DNA can be packaged into the preformed heads made at high temperature following activation of the product of gene 49 (P49), strongly supporting the pathway for phage head maturation described by Laemmli &; Favre (1973).The so-called τ-particles, which accumulate in 24-defective cells, can serve as precursors of the mature phage (Bijlenga et al., 1973). We have measured the uptake of BrdU-labeled DNA into τ-particles during their maturation. We find that a very large proportion of DNA made after activation of P24 is apparently incorporated into preformed τ-particles as these particles are converted into mature heads. This indicates that the τ-particles contain very little or no DNA prior to P24 activation and supports the pathway described by Laemmli &; Favre (1973).  相似文献   

4.
With the exception of mutants in gene 49, all mutants in phage T4 defective in the process of head filling accumulate a normal replicative DNA intermediate of 200S. Mutants in gene 49 produce a very fast-sedimenting (VFS) DNA with s values of greater than 1,000S. The intracellular development of the VFS-DNA generated in gene 49-defective phage-infected cells was followed by sedimentation analysis of crude lysates on neutral sucrose gradients. It was observed that the production of a 200S replicative intermediate is one step in the development of VFS-DNA. After restoring permissive conditions the development of the VFS-DNA can be reversed, but the 200S form is not regenerated under these conditions. The process of head filling can take place from the VFS-DNA under permissive conditions. From the absence of other components in the VFS-DNA complexes, its high resistance to shearing, its resistance against the attack of the single-strand-specific nuclease S1, and from its appearance in the electron microscope, a complex structure of tightly packed DNA is inferred. The demonstration by the electron microscope of branched DNA structures sometimes closely related to partially filled heads is taken in support of the idea that the process of head filling in gene 49-defective phage-infected cells is blocked by some steric hindrance in the DNA. In light of these results, the role of gene 49 is discussed as a control function for the clearance of these structures. A fixation procedure for cross-linking of gene 49-defective heads to the VFS-DNA allowed us to study progressive stages in the process of head filling. Electron microscopic evidence is presented which suggests that during the initial events the DNA accumulates in the vertexes of the head.  相似文献   

5.
Defective heads present in extracts of bacteriophage T4 gene 16, 17, or 49 mutant-infected cells have been characterized. All appeared as empty shells when examined by negative-stain electron microscopy and showed essentially the same polypeptide pattern on sodium dodecyl sulfate-acrylamide gels. However, when analyzed by several other methods, gene 16- and 17-defective heads were shown to differ markedly from phage heads present in gene 49-defective extracts. First, the gene 16- and 17-defective structures were found to possess a large number of attached tails (50%, rather than about 5%). Second, they contained less nuclease-resistant deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) (3 versus 18% of a phage equivalent), had a smaller sedimentation coefficient (240 versus 315S), and a lighter density (1.31 vs. 1.34 g/ml) than gene 49-defective heads. Third, they were not attached to the intracellular DNA pool through a deoxyribonuclease-sensitive linkage. Finally, 8-nm diameter capsomers were clearly revealed on the surface of many gene 16- and 17-defective structures. There was a total of 305 ± 25 capsomers per particle, which yielded an approximate molecular weight of 84 × 106 for these heads. The capsomers were presumably not seen on gene 49-defective heads because of the large amount (18%) of associated DNA.  相似文献   

6.
Following infection under non-permissive conditions, T4 mutants defective in gene 49 accumulate structures which appear in the electron microscope to be empty phage heads. These structures are seen in extracts prepared under a variety of conditions, as well as in sections of the mutant-infected cells. The 49-defective heads (300 s) can be separated from phage particles (1000 s) by sedimentation through a sucrose gradient. A temperature-sensitive gene 49 mutant, tsC9, accumulates 300 s heads following infection at 41.5 °C, but can be “rescued” by a shift-down to 25 °C during the latter half of the latent period. Evidence from pulse-chase isotopic labeling experiments suggests that the 49-defective heads are intermediates in head formation. 14C-Labeled lysine, incorporated into the 300 s fraction at 41.5 °C, is rapidly and almost quantitatively transferred into the 1000 s phage particle fraction following a chase with an excess of unlabeled lysine and a shift to low temperature. The same result is observed when puromycin (200 μg/ml.) or chloramphenicol (200 μg/ml.) is added to the culture before temperature shift, suggesting that the inactive gene 49 product produced at high temperature becomes active at low temperature. In pulse-chase experiments carried out with wild-type T4-infected cells during the latter half of the latent period, the labeling kinetics of the 300 s and phage particle fractions support a precursor-product relationship. Conservation of the 300 s head structures during conversion to phage is demonstrated by 13C-15N density labeling of tsC9-infected cells at 41.5 °C followed by transfer to 12C-14N medium, shift to low temperature, isolation and lysis of the phage particles formed and centrifugation of the phage ghosts to equilibrium in CsCl solution.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
Petite T4 phage particles have a shorter head than normal T4 phage and contain less DNA. They are not viable in single infections but are able to complement each other in multiply infected cells. Such particles normally make up 1 to 3% of T4 lysates. We show here that lysates of T4 grown on Escherichia coli H560 (end-A?, pol-A?) contain 33% of such petite particles. These particles are identical in physical and biological properties to those described previously, only their high frequency is abnormal. The frequency of petite particles in lysates grown on H560 is controlled by the presence or absence of the gene for DNA polymerase I (pol-A1) and apparently also a gene for endonuclease I (end-A). The involvement of these host DNA enzymes with T4 head morphology and DNA content indicates that DNA is directly involved in head morphogenesis. Such an involvement is incompatible with models of T4 head morphogenesis in which dimensionally stable, preformed empty heads are precursors of filled heads. The processing or repair of DNA apparently helps decide whether the assembly of T4 head subunits produces normal or petite heads.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
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   

11.
We have presented a new approach to studying bacteriophage T4 head maturation. Using a modified M-band technique, we have shown that progeny deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) was synthesized on the host cell membrane throughout infection. This DNA was released from the membrane later in infection as the result of formation of the phage head; detachment of the DNA required the action of gene products 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 31, 16, 17 and 49, known to be necessary for normal head formation. Gene products 2, 4, 50, 64, 65, 13 and 14, also involved in head morphogenesis were not required to detach progeny DNA from the membrane; the presence of the phage tail and tail fibers also was not required. DNA was released in the form of immature heads and initially was sensitive to deoxyribonuclease (DNase). Conversion to DNase resistance followed rapidly. The amount of phage precursors present at the time of DNA synthesis determined the time of onset and detachment rate of DNA from the M band as well as the kinetics by which the detached DNA become DNase resistant.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Cummings et al. (1973) reported that whenl-canavanine was chased from a T-even. bacteriophage-infected culture with its analog,l-arginine, a new type of aberrant particle was formed. These particles, which were termed “lollipops”, had giant heads as long as 44 normal head lengths, and were filled with DNA. We have now separated these particles into different size classes ranging from about three to 13 normal head lengths and measured the molecular weight of their DNA. The DNA released from intact phage particles by neutral or alkaline detergent lysis was characterized using a recently described biophysical technique which determines DNA molecular weight from solution viscoelasticity. The maximum DNA size correlated roughly with phage head length, indicating that these giant heads were often filled with single, long DNA molecules rather than with several normal-sized molecules. Many of the heads, however, must have contained several molecules, since a large amount of DNA of less than maximum size was present. In alkali the native molecules separated into single strands of approximately the same length as that of the native molecules.  相似文献   

14.
Mutants in the genes governing the maturation of the head of bacteriophage T4 and in gene 24 were studied by electron microscopy of thin sections. We define morphologically: black particles, comprising mature, stable heads and immature, fragile heads, which break down upon lysis; grizzled particles, which apparently are partially filled or partially emptied; empty large particles without DNA or core Which are all the same size as normal heads; empty small particles without DNA and without core which are of the size of the τ particle, which is the prehead of phage T4. The study of single and double mutants of the maturation genes demonstrates that the phenotypes are only different by the proportions of the different particles made except for 17? where only empty small and empty large particles accumulate. The mutants in gene 24 are epistatic on all other mutants. Mutants in gene 17 are epistatic on the remaining ones. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that the products of several of the maturation genes act on DNA to render it competent for packaging while the others act directly on the particle. By this uncoupling, bypasses and abortive pathways can result.  相似文献   

15.
We have studied bacteriophage λ head assembly under conditions in which the normal pathways for late phage DNA (concatemer) synthesis are blocked, and early (monomeric circular) DNA replication products accumulate. Our results show that under such conditions, the amount of late protein per amount of DNA is normal, but the amount of phage produced is not. Electron microscopic examination of thin sections of these bacteria shows that large numbers of “empty” head-shaped particles are produced. We conclude that the packaging of λ DNA depends on some structure (or property) possessed by DNA concatemers and absent in monomeric circular molecules and that the empty head-shaped particles which accumulate when concatemer production is blocked are head precursors which would normally accept concatemer DNA.These empty particles are the same size (approximately 550 Å vertex-to-vertex diameter) as the electron-dense, DNA-filled particles observed in similar sections of wild-type infected bacteria. In lysates the empty particles are approximately the same size as they are within the bacteria. However, filled heads observed in thin sections (or in negatively stained preparations) of lysates are larger than they are within the bacteria. This observation is contrary to what was previously suspected, since there seems to be little or no change in the size of intracellular λ capsids as a direct consequence of DNA packaging. Instead, an increase in the size of completed phage heads seems to take place as a consequence of cell lysis.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
An antigenic component of T4 whiskers (short fibrils located in the region of the head—tail junction) has been reported to be under the control of gene 49 (Yanagida & Ahmad-Zadeh, 1970; Yanagida, 1972). This was based on immunological evidence using antiserum to particles of T4D adsorbed with gene 49-defective extract made with the mutant amE727. The latter phage, however, is shown here to be a double mutant bearing amber mutations in gene 49 and another gene, herein referred to as wac (whisker antigen control gene). Gene wac maps in the general region of gene 16. Evidence is presented indicating that the whisker antigen is under the control of wac and not gene 49. In wac-defective infections phage are produced that lack a protein. This protein appears by electrophoretic analysis in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels to be the major component of the antigen.The tail fibers of wac-defective bacteriophage are in an open configuration under conditions in which those of wild-type phage are folded alongside the tail. Thus, the wac gene may have a role in the regulation of tail-fiber configuration.  相似文献   

18.
Petit λ is an empty spherical shell of protein which appears wherever λ grows. If phage DNA and petit λ are added to a cell-free extract of induced lysogenic bacteria, then phage particles are formed that contain the DNA and protein from the petit λ. Petit λ is transformed, without dissociation, into a phage head by addition of DNA and more phage proteins.The products of ten genes, nine phage and one host, are required for λ head assembly. Among these, the products of four phage genes, E, B, C, and Nu3 and of the host gene groE are involved in the synthesis of petit λ, consequently these proteins are dispensable for head assembly in extracts to which petit λ has been added. The products of genes A and D allow DNA to combine with petit λ to form a head that has normal morphology. In an extract, DNA can react with A product and petit λ to become partially DNAase-resistant, as if an unstable DNA-filled intermediate were formed. ATP and spermidine are needed at this stage. This intermediate is subsequently stabilized by addition of D product. The data suggest a pathway for head assembly.  相似文献   

19.
Host participation in bacteriophage lambda head assembly   总被引:55,自引:0,他引:55  
Mutants of Escherichia coli, called groE, specifically block assembly of bacteriophage λ heads. When groE bacteria are infected by wild type λ, phage adsorption, DNA injection and replication, tail assembly, and cell lysis are all normal. No active heads are formed, however, and head related “monsters” are seen in lysates. These monsters are similar to the structures seen on infection of wild-type cells by phage defective in genes B or C.We have isolated mutants of λ which can overcome the block in groE hosts and have mapped these mutants. All groE mutations can be compensated for by mutation of phage gene E (hence the name groE). Gene E codes for the major structural subunit of the phage head. Some groE mutants, called groEB, can be compensated by mutation in either gene E or in gene B. Gene B is another head gene.During normal head assembly the protein encoded by phage head gene B or C appears to be converted to a lower molecular weight form, h3, which is found in phage. The appearance of h3 protein in fast sedimenting head related structures requires the host groE function.We suggest that the proteins encoded by phage genes E, B and C, and the bacterial component defined by groE mutations act together at an early stage in head assembly.  相似文献   

20.
The effect on phage morphogenesis of sus mutations in the cistrons coding for nonstructural proteins has been studied. Mutants in three cistrons analyzed that are involved in phage DNA synthesis, as well as in cistron 16 which codes for a late nonstructural protein, produce prolate capsids which are more rounded at the corners than complete phage heads and have an internal core; they contain the head proteins, the upper collar protein and protein p7, not present in mature phage particles. Mutants in cistron 7 do not produce capsids nor other phage-related structures; this result and the presence of p7 in phage capsids suggest an essential role in capsid assembly for this protein. The protein product of cistron 13 is probably needed for a stable DNA encapsulation since mutants in this cistron produce mainly DNA-free complete phage particles and only about 10% of uninfective DNA-containing complete phage. Cistron 15 codes for a late, partially dispensable, nonstructural protein which is present in the DNA-free capsids produced after infection with the delayed-lysis mutant sus14(1242), used as the wild-type control, or with mutants in cistrons 9, 11,12 and 13. Proteins p15 and p16 are probably involved in the encapsulation of viral DNA in a prohead.  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