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Cross-Specificities Between cII-like Proteins and pRE-like Promoters of Lambdoid Bacteriophages
Author(s) -
Daniel L. Wulff,
Michael Mahoney
Publication year - 1987
Publication title -
genetics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.792
H-Index - 246
eISSN - 1943-2631
pISSN - 0016-6731
DOI - 10.1093/genetics/115.4.597
Subject(s) - biology , promoter , transcription (linguistics) , genetics , dna , microbiology and biotechnology , dna binding protein , sequence (biology) , plasmid , transcription factor , gene , gene expression , linguistics , philosophy
We have investigated the activation of transcription from the pRE promoters of phages λ, 21 and P22 by the λ and 21 cII proteins and the P22 c1 (cII-like) protein, using an in vivo system in which cII protein from a derepressed prophage activates transcription from a pRE DNA fragment on a multicopy plasmid. We find that each protein is highly specific for its own cognate pRE promoter, although measureable cross-reactions are observed. The primary recognition sequence for cII protein on λ pRE is a pair of TTGC repeat sequences in the sequence 5′-TTGCN6TTGC-3′ at the -35 region of the promoter. This same sequence is found in 21 pRE, while P22 pRE has the sequence 5′-TTGCN6TTGT-3′, which is the same as that of λctr1, a pRE  + variant of λ. λctr1 pRE is half as active as λ+  pRE when assayed with either the λ cII or the P22 c1 proteins. Therefore, the single base change in the P22 repeat sequence cannot explain why the P22 c1 protein is much more active with P22 pRE than λ pRE. The dya5 mutation, a G→A change at position -43 of pRE, makes pRE a stronger promoter when assayed with either the λ or 21 cII proteins or the P22 c1 protein. We conclude that efficient activation of a cII-dependent promoter by a cII protein requires sequence information in addition to the TTGC repeat sequences. We do not know the characteristics of the proteins which are responsible for the specificity of each protein for its own cognate promoter. However, λdya8, which has a Glu27→Lys alteration in the λ cII protein and a cII  + phenotype, results in a mutant cII protein that is much more highly specific than wild-type cII protein for its own cognate λ pRE promoter. This is especially remarkable because the dya8 amino acid alteration makes the helix-2 region (the region of the protein predicted to make contact with the phosphodiester backbone of the DNA) of λ cII protein conform exactly with the helix-2 region of the P22 c1 protein in both charge and charge distribution.

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