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Instability of CII is needed for efficient switching between lytic and lysogenic development in bacteriophage 186
Author(s) -
Iain Murchland,
Alexandra Ahlgren-Berg,
Julian MJ Pietsch,
Alejandra Isabel,
Ian B. Dodd,
Keith E. Shearwin
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
nucleic acids research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.008
H-Index - 537
eISSN - 1362-4954
pISSN - 0305-1048
DOI - 10.1093/nar/gkaa1065
Subject(s) - lysogenic cycle , lytic cycle , biology , prophage , bacteriophage , psychological repression , repressor , transcription (linguistics) , microbiology and biotechnology , lysogen , temperateness , genetics , virology , gene expression , gene , escherichia coli , virus , linguistics , philosophy
The CII protein of temperate coliphage 186, like the unrelated CII protein of phage λ, is a transcriptional activator that primes expression of the CI immunity repressor and is critical for efficient establishment of lysogeny. 186-CII is also highly unstable, and we show that in vivo degradation is mediated by both FtsH and RseP. We investigated the role of CII instability by constructing a 186 phage encoding a protease resistant CII. The stabilised-CII phage was defective in the lysis-lysogeny decision: choosing lysogeny with close to 100% frequency after infection, and forming prophages that were defective in entering lytic development after UV treatment. While lysogenic CI concentration was unaffected by CII stabilisation, lysogenic transcription and CI expression was elevated after UV. A stochastic model of the 186 network after infection indicated that an unstable CII allowed a rapid increase in CI expression without a large overshoot of the lysogenic level, suggesting that instability enables a decisive commitment to lysogeny with a rapid attainment of sensitivity to prophage induction.

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