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1.
When studying the single cycle of the multiplication of gene 26 mutant amN131 of phage T4, like in temperature shift experiments, the yield of this mutant in non-permissive host depends greatly on the temperature. The burts size of phage in Escherichia coli B is found to be 3.3 phage particles at 25 degrees C, 1.6 at 30 degrees C, 0.051 at 37 degrees C and 0.0007 at 41 degrees C. In the case of permissive host (E. coli CR-63) the burst size per cell decreases from 158 to 49 phage particles at the same temperature interval. The results of the single-burst experiments indicate, that when the incubation temperature increases, the number of E. coli B cells, in which the phage particles maturate, also decreases. It results in the dependence of the transmission coefficient value on the temperature. The transmission coefficient in the conditions favourable for the maturation of the phage is found to be 0.80. It is shown by several methods that the temperature sensitivity of the multiplication of the mutant amN131 in bacterial cells is entirely due to amber mutation in genome of the phage. Therefore the amber mutants having high temperature sensitivity when maturating in non-permissive host cells exist among ordinary amber mutants of phage T4.  相似文献   

2.
The Escherichia coli lit gene product is required for the multiplication of bacteriophage T4 at temperatures below 34 degrees C. After infection of a lit mutant host, early gene product synthesis is normal, as is T4 DNA replication; however, the late gene products never appear, and early gene product synthesis eventually ceases. Consequently, at late times, there is no protein synthesis of any kind (W. Cooley, K. Sirotkin, R. Green, and L. Snyder, J. Bacteriol. 140:83-91, 1979; W. Champness and L. Snyder, J. Mol. Biol. 155:395-407, 1982), and no phage are produced. We have isolated T4 mutants which can multiply in lit mutant hosts. The responsible T4 mutations (called gol mutations) completely overcome the block to T4 gene expression (Cooley et al., J. Bacteriol. 140:83-91). We have proposed that gol mutations alter a cis-acting regulatory site on T4 DNA rather than a diffusible gene product and that the wild-type form of the gol site (gol+) somehow interferes with gene expression late in infection (Champness and Snyder, J. Mol. Biol. 155:395-409). In this communication, we report the sequence of the gol region of the T4 genome from five different gol mutants. The gol mutations are all single-base-pair transitions within 40 base pairs of DNA. Therefore, the gol site is at least 40 base pairs long. The sequence data confirm that the gol phenotype is not due to an altered protein. We also report that the gol+ site in plasmids prevents transformation of Lit- but not Lit+ E. coli. Thus, the gol site is at least partially active in the absence of the T4 genome.  相似文献   

3.
Mutations of bacteriophage T4B were found which suppress the lysis defect of both gene stII mutants and gene e mutants. The suppressor mutations belong to a new gene, stIII, of phage T4B. Gene stIII is located on the genetic map of T4B between genes stI and e. stIII mutants sometimes form star plaques on Escherichia coli B. The latent period on E. coli 594, but not E. coli B, is shorter with stIII mutants than that with wild-type phage. The premature lysis of E. coli 594 infected with stIII phage does not depend on the expression of both stII+ and e+ function. StIII allele is dominant over the stIII+ with respect to both the ability to suppress the stII defect and the early lysis of infected E. coli 594 cultures.  相似文献   

4.
A bacteriophage T4 gene which functions to inhibit Escherichia coli Lon protease has been identified. This pin (proteolysis inhibition) gene was selected for its ability to support plaque formation by a lambda Ots vector at 40 degrees C. Southern blot experiments indicated that this T4 gene is included within the 4.9-kilobase XbaI fragment which contains gene 49. Subcloning experiments showed that T4 gene 49.1 (designated pinA) is responsible for the ability of the Ots vector to form plaques at 40 degrees C. Deficiencies in Lon protease activity are the only changes known in E. coli that permit lambda Ots phage to form plaques efficiently at 40 degrees C. lon+ lysogens of the lambda Ots vector containing pinA permitted a lambda Ots phage to form plaques efficiently at 40 degrees C. Furthermore, these lysogens, upon comparison with similar lysogens lacking any T4 DNA, showed reduced levels of degradation of puromycyl polypeptides and of canavanyl proteins. The lon+ lysogens that contained pinA exhibited other phenotypic characteristics common to lon strains, such as filamentation and production of mucoid colonies. Levels of degradation of canavanyl proteins were essentially the same, however, in null lon lysogens which either contained or lacked pinA. We infer from these data that the T4 pinA gene functions to block Lon protease activity; pinA does not, however, appear to block the activity of proteases other than Lon that are involved in the degradation of abnormal proteins.  相似文献   

5.
The nucleoids of Escherichia coli S/6/5 cells are rapidly unfolded at about 3 min after infection with wild-type T4 bacteriophage or with nuclear disruption deficient, host DNA degradation-deficient multiple mutants of phage T4. Unfolding does not occur after infection with T4 phage ghosts. Experiments using chloramphenicol to inhibit protein synthesis indicate that the T4-induced unfolding of the E. coli chromosomes is dependent on the presence of one or more protein synthesized between 2 and 3 min after infection. A mutant of phage T4 has been isolated which fails to induce this early unfolding of the host nucleoids. This mutant has been termed "unfoldase deficient" (unf-) despite the fact that the function of the gene product defective in this strain is not yet known. Mapping experiments indicate that the unf- mutation is located near gene 63 between genes 31 and 63. The folded genomes of E. coli S/6/5 cells remain essentially intact (2,000-3,000S) at 5 min after infection with unfoldase-, nuclear disruption-, and host DNA degradation-deficient T4 phage. Nuclear disruption occurs normally after infection with unfoldase- and host DNA degradation-deficient but nuclear disruption-proficient (ndd+), T4 phage. The host chromosomes remain partially folded (1,200-1,800S) at 5 min after infection with the unfoldase single mutant unf39 x 5 or an unfoldase- and host DNA degradation-deficient, but nuclear disruption-proficient, T4 strain. The presence of the unfoldase mutation causes a slight delay in host DNA degradation in the presence of nuclear disruption but has no effect on the rate of host DNA degradation in the absence of nuclear disruption. Its presence in nuclear disruption- and host DNA degradation-deficient multiple mutants does not alter the shutoff to host DNA or protein synthesis.  相似文献   

6.
L. J. Reha-Krantz 《Genetics》1990,124(2):213-220
Intragenic complementation was detected within the bacteriophage T4 DNA polymerase gene. Complementation was observed between specific amino (N)-terminal, temperature-sensitive (ts) mutator mutants and more carboxy (C)-terminal mutants lacking DNA polymerase polymerizing functions. Protein sequences surrounding N-terminal mutation sites are similar to sequences found in Escherichia coli ribonuclease H (RNase H) and in the 5'----3' exonuclease domain of E. coli DNA polymerase I. These observations suggest that T4 DNA polymerase, like E. coli DNA polymerase I, contains a discrete N-terminal domain.  相似文献   

7.
C Kao  E Gumbs    L Snyder 《Journal of bacteriology》1987,169(3):1232-1238
Escherichia coli lit mutations inhibit gene expression late in infection by bacteriophage T4. We cloned the lit gene from wild-type E. coli and three independent lit mutants. We present evidence that lit mutations [renamed lit(Con) mutations] cause overproduction of the lit gene product and that overproduction of this product causes the inhibition of gene expression. We also present evidence that the lit gene product is nonessential for E. coli growth, although the gene is common to most E. coli K-12 strains.  相似文献   

8.
The product of gene 1.2 of bacteriophage T7 is not required for the growth of T7 in wild-type Escherichia coli since deletion mutants lacking the entire gene 1.2 grow normally (Studier et al., J. Mol. Biol. 135:917-937, 1979). By using a T7 strain lacking gene 1.2, we have isolated a mutant of E. coli that was unable to support the growth of both point and deletion mutants defective in gene 1.2. The mutation, optA1, was located at approximately 3.6 min on the E. coli linkage map in the interval between dapD and tonA; optA1 was 92% cotransducible with dapD. By using the optA1 mutant, we have isolated six gene 1.2 point mutants of T7, all of which mapped between positions 15 and 16 on the T7 genetic map. These mutations have also been characterized by DNA sequence analysis, E. coli optA1 cells infected with T7 gene 1.2 mutants were defective in T7 DNA replication; early RNA and protein synthesis proceeded normally. The defect in T7 DNA replication is manifested by a premature cessation of DNA synthesis and degradation of the newly synthesized DNA. The defect was not observed in E. coli opt+ cells infected with T7 gene 1.2 mutants or in E. coli optA1 cells infected with wild-type T7 phage.  相似文献   

9.
T4 polynucleotide kinase (Pnk) is the founding member of a family of 5'-kinase/3'-phosphatase enzymes that heal broken termini in RNA or DNA by converting 3'-PO(4)/5'-OH ends into 3'-OH/5'-PO(4) ends, which are then suitable for sealing by RNA or DNA ligases. Here we employed site-directed mutagenesis and biochemical methods to dissect the domain structure of the homotetrameric T4 Pnk protein and to localize essential constituents of the apparently separate active sites for the 5'-kinase and 3'-phosphatase activities. We characterized deletion mutants Pnk(42-301) and Pnk(1-181), which correspond to domains defined by proteolysis with chymotrypsin. Pnk(1-181) is a monomer with no 3'-phosphatase and low residual 5'-kinase activity. Pnk(42-301) is a dimer with no 5'-kinase and low residual 3'-phosphatase activity. Four classes of missense mutational effects were observed. (i) Mutations K15A, S16A, and D35A inactivated the 5'-kinase but did not affect the 3'-phosphatase or the tetrameric quaternary structure of T4 Pnk. 5'-kinase activity was ablated by the conservative mutations K15R, K15Q, and D35N; however, kinase activity was restored by the S16T change. (ii) Mutation D167A inactivated the 3'-phosphatase without affecting the 5'-kinase or tetramerization. (iii) Mutation D85A caused a severe decrement in 5'-kinase activity and only a modest effect on the 3'-phosphatase; the nearby N87A mutation resulted in a significantly reduced 3'-phosphatase activity and slightly reduced 5'-kinase activity. D85A and N87A both affected the quaternary structure, resulting in a mixed population of tetramer and dimer species. (iv) Alanine mutations at 11 other conserved positions had no significant effect on either 5'-kinase or 3'-phosphatase activity.  相似文献   

10.
Genes 46 and 47 of phage T4 control a nuclease that is required for genetic recombination and may act similarly to the Escherichia coli RecBC nuclease. In vivo, the nucleolytic activities of both of these nucleases must be moderated so that recombining DNA intermediates are not destroyed. We conclude from our present experiments that the phage T4 gene 32 protein, specifically its C-terminal domain, participates in such moderation. We have investigated DNA degradation in different gene 32 and gene 32/46 mutants under conditions that are completely restrictive for progeny production in all the mutants. Under these conditions, DNA of those gene 32 mutants in which the C-terminal domain of the protein is not synthesized or is modified is degraded to acid-soluble material. T4 gene 46 or E. coli recB mutations reduce such degradation; together they abolish it completely. By contrast, single gene 32 mutants which produce an unaltered C-terminal domain show little or no degradation of their DNA. Residual protection against nucleases is unrelated to residual primary DNA replication or to overproduction of the mutant peptides in the different gene 32 mutants.  相似文献   

11.
12.
J. D. Karam  M. Leach    L. J. Heere 《Genetics》1979,91(2):177-189
T4 phage completely defective in both gene 30 (DNA ligase) and the rII gene (function unknown) require at least normal levels of host-derived DNA ligase (E. coli lig gene) for growth. Viable E. coli mutant strains that harbor less than 5% of the wild-type level of bacterial ligase do not support growth of T4 doubly defective in genes 30 and rII (T4 30- rII- mutants). We describe here two classes of secondary phage mutations that permit the growth of T4 30- rII- phage on ligase-defective hosts. One class mapped in T4 gene su30 (Krylov 1972) and improved T4 30- rII- phage growth on all E. coli strains, but to varying degrees that depended on levels of residual host ligase. Another class mapped in T4 gene 32 (helix-destabilizing protein) and improved growth specifically on a host carrying the lig2 mutation, but not on a host carrying another lig- lesion (lig4). Two conclusions are drawn from the work: (1) the role of DNA ligase in essential DNA metabolic processes in T4-infected E. coli is catalytic rather than stoichiometric, and (2) the E. coli DNA ligase is capable of specific functional interactions with components of the T4 DNA replication and/or repair apparatus.  相似文献   

13.
14.
The shutoff of host DNA synthesis is delayed until about 8 to 10 min after infection when Escherichia coli B/5 cells were infected with bacteriophage T4 mutants deficient in the ability to induce nuclear disruption (ndd mutants). The host DNA synthesized after infection with ndd mutants is stable in the absence of T4 endonucleases II and IV, but is unstable in the presence of these nucleases. Host protein synthesis, as indicated by the inducibility of beta-galactosidase and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel patterns of isoptopically labeled proteins synthesize after infection, is shut off normally in ndd-infected cells, even in the absence of host DNA degradation. The Cal Tech wild-type strain of E. coli CT447 was found to restrict growth of the ndd mutants. Since T4D+ also has a very low efficiency of plating on CT447, we have isolated a nitrosoguanidine-induced derivative of CT447 which yields a high T4D+ efficiency of plating while still restricting the ndd mutants. Using this derivative, CT447 T4 plq+ (for T4 plaque+), we have shown that hos DNA degradation and shutoff of host DNA synthesis occur after infection with either ndd98 X 5 (shutoff delayed) or T4D+ (shutoff normal) with approximately the same kinetics as in E. coli strain B/5. Nuclear disruption occurs after infection of CT447 with ndd+ phage, but not after infection with ndd- phage. The rate of DNA synthesis after infection of CT447 T4 plq+ with ndd98 X 5 is about 75% of the rate observed after infection with T4D+ while the burst size of ndd98 X 5 is only 3.5% of that of T4D+. The results of gene dosage experiments using the ndd restrictive host C5447 suggest that the ndd gene product is required in stoichiometric amounts. The observation by thin-section electron microscopy of two distinct pools of DNA, one apparently phage DNA and the other host DNA, in cells infected with nuclear disruption may be a compartmentalization mechanism which separates the pathways of host DNA degradation and phage DNA biosynthesis.  相似文献   

15.
Francisella tularensis and related intracellular pathogens synthesize lipid A molecules that differ from their Escherichia coli counterparts. Although a functional orthologue of lpxK, the gene encoding the lipid A 4'-kinase, is present in Francisella, no 4'-phosphate moiety is attached to Francisella lipid A. We now demonstrate that a membrane-bound phosphatase present in Francisella novicida U112 selectively removes the 4'-phosphate residue from tetra- and pentaacylated lipid A molecules. A clone that expresses the F. novicida 4'-phosphatase was identified by assaying lysates of E. coli colonies, harboring members of an F. novicida genomic DNA library, for 4'-phosphatase activity. Sequencing of a 2.5-kb F. novicida DNA insert from an active clone located the structural gene for the 4'-phosphatase, designated lpxF. It encodes a protein of 222 amino acid residues with six predicted membrane-spanning segments. Rhizobium leguminosarum and Rhizobium etli contain functional lpxF orthologues, consistent with their lipid A structures. When F. novicida LpxF is expressed in an E. coli LpxM mutant, a strain that synthesizes pentaacylated lipid A, over 90% of the lipid A molecules are dephosphorylated at the 4'-position. Expression of LpxF in wild-type E. coli has no effect, because wild-type hexaacylated lipid A is not a substrate. However, newly synthesized lipid A is not dephosphorylated in LpxM mutants by LpxF when the MsbA flippase is inactivated, indicating that LpxF faces the outer surface of the inner membrane. The availability of the lpxF gene will facilitate re-engineering lipid A structures in diverse bacteria.  相似文献   

16.
Mutants of bacteriophage T4D which fail to induce the deoxyribonucleotide-specific T4 3'-phosphatase have been isolated. These mutants (T4pseT) grow as well as wild-type T4 in most strains of Escherichia coli, but not in the T4-sensitive "Hospital Strain," CT196, or in a derivative strain, CTr5x. Both the formation of infectious centers and the final yield of phage are reduced by 98% when CTr5x is infected by T4pseT mutants. The growth defects are accompanied by a 50% reduction in the rate of T4 DNA synthesis, a decrease in the single-strand length of the DNA product to about one-half the mature length, and greatly reduced packaging of DNA into phage particles. Introduction of an extra-cistronic suppressor mutation (stp) into T4pseT eliminates both the requirement for the T4 3'-phosphatase in infected CTr5x and the other observed effects of the pseT mutations. The pseT gene lies between genes 63 and 31. The stp gene lies in the nonessential region between rIIB and ac. Our results suggest that 3'-phosphoryl termini can disrupt T4 DNA replication to the extent that T4 3'-phosphatase becomes required for phage production.  相似文献   

17.
Cold centrifugation of lysis-inhibited Escherichia coli B infected with wild-type T4D results in extensive lysis beginning around 20 min after infection at 37 degrees C. Infection with an e mutant, which fails to make lysozyme, prevents lysis, but does not prevent a marked loss of K+ and Mg3+. The t gene product, thought to disrupt the cytoplasmic membrane in natural lysis, is not required for this handling-induced cation loss or lysis. Three lines of evidence argue that late protein synthesis is required to develop this potential for cation loss; the potential does not develop in infections by: (i) mutants defective in DNA synthesis, (ii) mutants defective in gene 55, and (iii) wild-type T4 when chloramphenicol is added at 6 min after infection. All late mutants examined, which are blocked in the major pathways of morphogenesis, do not prevent development of the potential. The evidence argues for a new, late effect of T4 infection on the cytoplasmic membrane.  相似文献   

18.
N Raghavan  M Ishaq    A Kaji 《Journal of virology》1980,35(2):551-554
Rts1 is a plasmid which confers upon the host bacteria the capacity to restrict T4 bacteriophage growth at 32 degrees C but not at 42 degrees C. Pulse-labeling of phage-infected cells showed that Rts1 restricts the synthesis of T1 DNA. Despite efficient restriction of T4 phage growth and DNA synthesis, infected Escherichia coli 20SO harboring Rts1 synthesized both early and late T4 phage RNA. Synthesis of early T4 phage RNA under restrictive conditions (32 degrees C) was almost equal to that found under nonrestrictive conditions, and a lesser, but significant, amount of late T4 phage RNA was made in almost complete absence of T4 DNA synthesis. Moreover, very little, if any, T4 phage-coded lysozyme was detected in the infected E. coli 20SO/Rts1 at 32 degrees C, whereas normal amounts of lysozyme were present at 42 degrees C.  相似文献   

19.
Proteins labeled with 14C-amino acids after infection of Escherichia coli B by T4 phage were examined by electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate. Four regA mutants (regA1, regA8, regA11, and regA15) failed to make a protein having a molecular weight of about 12,000, whereas mutant regA9 did make such a protein; regA15 produced a new, apparently smaller protein that was presumably a nonsense fragment, whereas regA11 produced a new, apparently larger protein. We conclude that the 12,000-dalton protein was the product of the regA gene. The molecular weight assignment rested primarily on our finding that the regA protein had the same mobility as the T4 gene 33 protein, which we identified by electrophoresis of whole-cell extracts of E. coli B infected with a gene 33 mutant, amE1120. Synthesis of wild-type regA protein occurred from about 3 to 11 min after infection at 37 degrees C in the DNA+ state and extended to about 20 min in the DNA- state. However, synthesis of the altered regA proteins of regA9, regA11, and regA15 occurred at a higher rate and for a much longer period in both the DNA+ and DNA- states; thus, the regA gene is autogenously regulated. At 30 degrees C, both regA9 and regA11 exhibited partial regA function by eventually shutting off the synthesis of many T4 early proteins; the specificity of this shutoff differed between these two mutants. We also obtained evidence that the regA protein is not Stevens's "polypeptide 3." As a technical point, we found that, when quantitating acid-precipitable radioactivity in protein samples containing sodium dodecyl sulfate, it was necessary to use 15 to 20% trichloroacetic acid; use of 5% acid, e.g., resulted in loss of over half of the labeled protein.  相似文献   

20.
Wild-type bacteriophage T4 was enriched for mutants which fail to degrade Escherichia coli deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) by the following method. E. coli B was labeled in DNA at high specific activity with tritiated thymidine ((3)H-dT) and infected at low multiplicity with unmutagenized T4D. At 25 min after infection, the culture was lysed and stored. Wild-type T4 degrades the host DNA and incorporates the (3)H-dT into the DNA of progeny phage; mutants which fail to degrade the host DNA make unlabeled progeny phage. Wild-type progeny are eventually inactivated by tritium decay; mutants survive. Such mutants were found at a frequency of about 1% in the survivors. Eight mutants are in a single complementation group called denA located near gene 63. Four of these mutants which were examined in detail leave the bulk of the host DNA in large fragments. All eight mutants exhibit much less than normal T4 endonuclease II activity. The mutants produce somewhat fewer phage and less DNA than does wild-type T4.  相似文献   

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