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Chapter 27 Phage Strategies 27.1 Introduction • bacteriophage (or phage) – A bacterial virus. • lytic infection – Infection of a bacterium by a phage that ends in the destruction of the bacterium with release of progeny phage. • lysis – The death of bacteria at the end of a phage infective cycle when they burst open to release the progeny of an infecting phage (because phage enzymes disrupt the bacterium’s cytoplasmic membrane or cell wall). 27.1 Introduction FIGURE 01: A phage may follow the lytic or lysogenic pathway 27.1 Introduction • virulent phage – A bacteriophage that can only follow the lytic cycle. • prophage – A phage genome covalently integrated as a linear part of the bacterial chromosome. • lysogeny – The ability of a phage to survive in a bacterium as a stable prophage component of the bacterial genome. 27.1 Introduction • temperate phage – A bacteriophage that can follow the lytic or lysogenic pathway. • integration – Insertion of a viral or another DNA sequence into a host genome as a region covalently linked on either side to the host sequences. • excision – Release of phage from the host chromosome as an autonomous DNA molecule. 27.1 Introduction • induction of phage – A phage’s entry into the lytic (infective) cycle as a result of destruction of the lysogenic repressor, which leads to excision of free phage DNA from the bacterial chromosome. • plasmid – Circular, extrachromosomal DNA. It is autonomous and can replicate itself. • episome – A plasmid able to integrate into bacterial DNA. 27.2 Lytic Development Is Divided into Two Periods • A phage infective cycle is divided into the early period (before replication) and the late period (after the onset of replication). • A phage infection generates a pool of progeny phage genomes that replicate and recombine. FIGURE 02: Phages reproduce in lytic development 27.3 Lytic Development Is Controlled by a Cascade • cascade – A sequence of events, each of which is stimulated by the previous one. – Transcriptional regulation is divided into stages, and at each stage one of the genes that is expressed encodes a regulator needed to express the genes of the next stage. FIGURE 03: Lytic development is a regulatory cascade 27.3 Lytic Development Is Controlled by a Cascade • The early (or immediate early) genes transcribed by host RNA polymerase following infection include, or comprise, regulators required for expression of the middle (or delayed early) set of phage genes. • The middle group of genes includes regulators to transcribe the late genes. • This results in the ordered expression of groups of genes during phage infection. 27.4 Two Types of Regulatory Events Control the Lytic Cascade • Regulator proteins used in phage cascades may sponsor initiation at new (phage) promoters or cause the host polymerase to read through transcription terminators. FIGURE 06: RNA polymerase controls promoter recognition. 27.5 The Phage T7 and T4 Genomes Show Functional Clustering • Genes concerned with related functions are often clustered. FIGURE 08: T4 genes show functional clustering 27.5 The Phage T7 and T4 Genomes Show Functional Clustering • Phages T7 and T4 are examples of regulatory cascades in which phage infection is divided into three periods. FIGURE 09: T4 genes fall into two general groups 27.6 Lambda Immediate Early and Delayed Early Genes Are Needed for Both Lysogeny and the Lytic Cycle • Lambda has two immediate early genes, N and cro, which are transcribed by host RNA polymerase. • The N gene is required to express the delayed early genes. • Three of the delayed early genes are regulators. 27.6 Lambda Immediate Early and Delayed Early Genes Are Needed for Both Lysogeny and the Lytic Cycle • Lysogeny requires the delayed early genes cII-cIII. • The lytic cycle requires the immediate early gene cro and the delayed early gene Q. FIGURE 10: Lambda has two lifestyles 27.7 The Lytic Cycle Depends on Antitermination by pN • pN is an antitermination factor that allows RNA polymerase to continue transcription past the ends of the two immediate early genes. • pQ is the product of a delayed early gene and is an antiterminator that allows RNA polymerase to transcribe the late genes. FIGURE 12: Similar controls apply to left and right transcription 27.7 The Lytic Cycle Depends on Antitermination by pN • Lambda DNA circularizes after infection; as a result, the late genes form a single transcription unit. FIGURE 13: Lambda has three stages of development 27.8 Lysogeny Is Maintained by the Lambda Repressor Protein • The lambda repressor, encoded by the cI gene, is required to maintain lysogeny. • The lambda repressor acts at the OL and OR operators to block transcription of the immediate early genes. • The immediate early genes trigger a regulatory cascade; as a result, their repression prevents the lytic cycle from proceeding. FIGURE 15: Repressor maintains lysogeny 27.9 The Lambda Repressor and Its Operators Define the Immunity Region • immunity – In phages, the ability of a prophage to prevent another phage of the same type from infecting a cell. • virulent mutations – Phage mutants that are unable to establish lysogeny. 27.9 The Lambda Repressor and Its Operators Define the Immunity Region • Several lambdoid phages have different immunity regions. • A lysogenic phage confers immunity to further infection by any other phage with the same immunity region. FIGURE 16: RNA polymerase initiates at Pl and Pr but not at Prm during the lytic cycle. 27.10 The DNA-Binding Form of the Lambda Repressor Is a Dimer • • • • A repressor monomer has two distinct domains. The N-terminal domain contains the DNA-binding site. The C-terminal domain dimerizes. Binding to the operator requires the dimeric form so that two DNA-binding domains can contact the operator simultaneously. 27.10 The DNA-Binding Form of the Lambda Repressor Is a Dimer • Cleavage of the repressor between the two domains reduces the affinity for the operator and induces a lytic cycle. FIGURE 18: Repressor cleavage induces lytic cycle 27.11 Lambda Repressor Uses a HelixTurn-Helix Motif to Bind DNA • Each DNA-binding region in the repressor contacts a half-site in the DNA. • The DNA-binding site of the repressor includes two short α-helical regions that fit into the successive turns of the major groove of DNA (helix-turn-helix). • A DNA-binding site is a (partially) palindromic sequence of 17 bp. FIGURE 19: The operator is a palindrome 27.11 Lambda Repressor Uses a HelixTurn-Helix Motif to Bind DNA • The amino acid sequence of the recognition helix makes contacts with particular bases in the operator sequence that it recognizes. FIGURE 22: Helix-3 determines DNA-binding specificity 27.12 Lambda Repressor Dimers Bind Cooperatively to the Operator • Repressor binding to one operator increases the affinity for binding a second repressor dimer to the adjacent operator. • The affinity is 10× greater for OL1 and OR1 than other operators, so they are bound first. • Cooperativity allows repressor to bind the OL2/OR2 sites at lower concentrations. FIGURE 25: Lambda repressors bind DNA cooperatively 27.13 Lambda Repressor Maintains an Autoregulatory Circuit • The DNA-binding region of repressor at OR2 contacts RNA polymerase and stabilizes its binding to PRM. • This is the basis for the autoregulatory control of repressor maintenance. • Repressor binding at OL blocks transcription of gene N from PL. FIGURE 26: Repressor maintains lysogeny but is absent during the lytic cycle 27.13 Lambda Repressor Maintains an Autoregulatory Circuit • Repressor binding at OR blocks transcription of cro, but also is required for transcription of cI. • Repressor binding to the operators therefore simultaneously blocks entry to the lytic cycle and promotes its own synthesis. FIGURE 27: Helix-2 interacts with DNA polymerase 27.14 Cooperative Interactions Increase the Sensitivity of Regulation • Repressor dimers bound at OL1 and OL2 interact with dimers bound at OR1 and OR2 to form octamers. • These cooperative interactions increase the sensitivity of regulation. FIGURE 29: Repressors to bind to OL3 and OR3 at higher concentrations 27.15 The cII and cIII Genes Are Needed to Establish Lysogeny • The delayed early gene products cII and cIII are necessary for RNA polymerase to initiate transcription at the promoter PRE. • cII acts directly at the promoter and cIII protects cII from degradation. • Transcription from PRE leads to synthesis of repressor and also blocks the transcription of cro. FIGURE 30: Repressor establishment uses a special promoter 27.16 A Poor Promoter Requires cII Protein • PRE has atypical sequences at –10 and –35. • RNA polymerase binds the promoter only in the presence of cII. • cII binds to sequences close to the –35 region. FIGURE 31: cII enables RNA polymerase to bind to PRE 27.17 Lysogeny Requires Several Events • cII and cIII cause repressor synthesis to be established and also trigger inhibition of late gene transcription. • Establishment of repressor turns off immediate and delayed early gene expression. • Repressor turns on the maintenance circuit for its own synthesis. • Lambda DNA is integrated into the bacterial genome at the final stage in establishing lysogeny. 27.17 Lysogeny Requires Several Events FIGURE 33: The lysogenic pathway leads to repressor synthesis 27.18 The Cro Repressor Is Needed for Lytic Infection • Cro binds to the same operators as the lambda repressor, but with different affinities. • When Cro binds to OR3, it prevents RNA polymerase from binding to PRM and blocks the maintenance of repressor promoter. 27.18 The Cro Repressor Is Needed for Lytic Infection • When Cro binds to other operators at OR or OL, it prevents RNA polymerase from expressing immediate early genes, which (indirectly) blocks repressor establishment. FIGURE 34: The lytic pathway leads to expression of cro and late genes 27.19 What Determines the Balance between Lysogeny and the Lytic Cycle? • The delayed early stage when both Cro and repressor are being expressed is common to lysogeny and the lytic cycle. • The critical event is whether cII causes sufficient synthesis of repressor to overcome the action of Cro. 27.19 What Determines the Balance between Lysogeny and the Lytic Cycle? FIGURE 35: Repressor determines lysogeny, and Cro determines the lytic cycle