Polarized packaging of bacteriophage lambda chromosomes. |
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Authors: | M Feiss A Bublitz |
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Institution: | Department of Microbiology, College of Medicine University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa 52242, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | Packaging of chromosomes during lytic growth of cohesive end-site (cos site) duplication strains of phage lambda is strikingly asymmetric; the duplication segment is generally at the left chromosome end (Emmons, 1974). In the present study, the packaging of non-replicating cos duplication chromosomes is shown to be similarly asymmetric. It is, therefore, likely that the packaging process itself is polarized, in an A to R direction. This conclusion is based on the study of packaging of repressed prophage chromosomes of dilysogenic strains of Escherichia coli by a heteroimmune helper. In these strains one of the two prophages contains a cos duplication (see Fig. 2). The frequency with which helper-packaged chromosomes carry the cos duplication segment agrees well with expectations derived from lytically grown phage.Haploid segregants are produced from the cos duplication strain at a lower level (35%) during lytic growth than during packaging of repressed prophage chromosomes (50%). This is expected if chromosomes are packaged processively (in sequence) during lytic growth.Packaging of repressed cos triplication chromosomes by a heteroimmune helper also yields a distribution of haploid and duplication chromosomes that agrees with expectations from lytically grown cos duplication phage and the assumption that the initial cutting of a cos site to initiate a packaging sequence is made at random.Polarized, processive packaging and random initial cutting are elements of a model of lambda chromosome packaging proposed by Emmons (1974), for which our experiments provide support. |
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