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Bacteriophage lambda l

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Lysis: Infection by phage produces many progeny and breaks open (lyses) the host ... terminator. Late control. cos. Not to scale! Immediate early transcription ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Bacteriophage lambda l


1
Bacteriophage lambda (l)
  • Transcriptional switches can regulate cellular
    decisions

2
Lysis or Lysogeny
  • Lysis Infection by phage produces many progeny
    and breaks open (lyses) the host bacterium
  • Lysogeny After infection, the phage DNA
    integrates into the host genome and resides there
    passively
  • No progeny
  • No lysis of the host
  • Bacteriophage lambda can do either.

3
Infection by temperate phage leads to lysis or
lysogeny
4
Temperate and lytic phage have a different plaque
morphology
Lytic phage clear plaques
5
Elements of lysogeny
  • The phage genome integrated into the host
    bacterial genome is a prophage.
  • Bacterium carrying the prophage is a lysogen.
  • Lysogens are immune to further infection by
    similar phage because the phage functions are
    repressed in trans.
  • Induction of the lysogen leads to excision of the
    prophage, replication of the phage DNA, and lysis
    of the host bacterium.

6
Induction and immunity of lysogens
l
7
Regulatory mutants of lambda
Clear plaque mutants
Need wild type for lysogeny
Establishment
Maintenance
cI
Yes
Yes
cII
Yes
No
cIII
Yes
No
Act in trans
Virulent mutants (vir)
Act in cis are double mutants in oR /or oL
8
Genes are clustered by function in the lambda
genome
Late control
Virus head tail
Recombination
Control region
Replication
Lysis
cos
origin
promoter
operator
terminator
Not to scale!
9
Immediate early transcription
Transcription by E. coli RNA polymerase initiates
at strong promoters PR , PR, and PL , and
terminates at ts.
6S RNA
10
Antitermination by N protein leads to early gene
expression
gam
int
red
att
xis
N
cI
cro
cII
O
P
Q
S
R
AJ
cIII
Pint
PL
PRM
PR
PRE
PR
tL1
tR1
tR2
t6S
tR3
6S RNA
N protein
Cro
CIII
CII
Q protein
Recombination proteins
Replication proteins
11
Lytic cascade Cro turns off cI, Q protein action
leads to late gene expression
Lytic functions
Replication proteins
Viral head tail proteins
12
Late stage of lytic cascade
High concentrations of Cro turn off PR and PL
. Abundant expression from PR.
Lytic functions
Viral head tail proteins
13
Lysogeny CII and CIII stimulate expression of cI
to make repressor
tint
PRE promoter for repression establishment
Repressor
14
Lysogeny Repressor turns off transcription
PRM promoter for repression maintenance
Repressor
Activated by Repressor binding to oR1 oR2
15
l operators overlap promoters
oR
oR1
oR2
oR3
PR
-10
-35
TTGACT
GATAAT
cro
N
ATAGAT 5
TTAGAT 5
-10
-35
PRM
16
Repressor structure
l repressor is a dimer monomer has 236 amino
acids.
l repressor can bind cooperatively to operator
sub-sites.
17
Cro structure
Cro is a dimer Monomer has 66 amino acids Has
only one protein domain Does NOT display
cooperativity
18
Competition between repressor and Cro for
operator sites
19
Use hybrid genes to dissect regulatory schemes
  • Place a convenient reporter gene under control of
    the regulatory elements being studied
  • Use a known regulatory region to control the
    trans-acting regulatory element

20
l/lac hybrid genes
Place l cI gene under lac control.
Use lacZ as a reporter.
lac p, o
l cI
l pR , OR
lacZ
321
Control amount of l repressor by IPTG.
E. coli with lac repressor, no lacZ.
See effect of l repressor by b-galactosidase
activity
21
l repressor will turn off expression from PR PL
lac p, o
l cI
l pR , OR
lacZ
b-galactosidase
l repressor
IPTG
l repressor acts cooperatively.
22
Mutation of oR1 decreases affinity for l repressor
lac p, o
l cI
l pR , OR
lacZ
LOF mutation at oR1
b-galactosidase
l repressor
IPTG
23
Repressor will stimulate transcription from PRM
lac p, o
l cI
l pRM , OR
lacZ
123
b-galactosidase
l repressor
IPTG
l repressor at oR1 and oR2 stimulates
transcription from pRM.
24
Binding of repressor blocks transcription from pR
but activates pRM
PR
-10
-35
2 dimers of Repressor, bound cooperatively
oR3
RNA Pol
cro
N
oR1
oR2
-10
-35
operator
PRM
promoter
-10
-35
25
Bacteriophage l Events leading to lysis
  • lysis or lysogeny (cI or Cro?) ?
  • Both lysis and lysogeny
  • PR, PL, PR active synthesize N, Cro
  • antitermination by N synthesize cIII, cII, Q
  • Lysis
  • Low Cro binds OR3, shuts off PRM (cI)
  • High Cro shuts off PR and PL
  • antitermination by Q activation of PR by Cro

26
Bacteriophage l Events leading to lysogeny
  • lysis or lysogeny (cI or Cro?) ?
  • Lysis and lysogeny
  • PR, PL, PR active synthesize N, Cro
  • antitermination by N synthesize cIII, cII, Q
  • Lysogeny
  • cII stimulate expression from PRE (cI repressor)
    and PINT (integrase)
  • cIII stabilizes cII
  • cI repressor shuts off PR, PL, PR (no lytic
    functions), stimulates PRM

27
Factors favoring lysogeny cause increased
concentrations of repressor vs. Cro
  • High multiplicity of infection
  • More templates produce more of the CII protein,
    which stimulates PRE.
  • Phage sense that it is too crowded.
  • Poor nutrient conditions for host
  • Low glucose leads to increase in cAMP.
  • Increased cAMP will repress the host gene hflA.
  • Less HflA (a protease) leads to less degradation
    of the CII protein.

28
Problems 4.35-4.39 provide a quantitative
approach to the competition between Cro and
repressor for the l operators.
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