Escherichia Coli Mutations That Prevent the Action of the T4 Unf/Alc Protein Map in an RNA Polymerase Gene

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RESUMO

Bacteriophage T4 has the substituted base hydroxymethylcytosine in its DNA and presumably shuts off host transcription by specifically blocking transcription of cytosine-containing DNA. When T4 incorporates cytosine into its own DNA, the shutoff mechanism is directed back at T4, blocking its late gene expression and phage production. Mutations which permit T4 multiplication with cytosine DNA should be in genes required for host shutoff. The only such mutations characterized thus far have been in the phage unf/alc gene. The product of this gene is also required for the unfolding of the host nucleoid after infection, hence its dual name unf/alc. As part of our investigation of the mechanism of action of unf/alc, we have isolated Escherichia coli mutants which propagate cytosine T4 even if the phage are genotypically alc(+). These same E. coli mutants are delayed in the T4-induced unfolding of their nucleoid, lending strong support to the conclusion that blocking transcription and unfolding the host nucleoid are but different manifestations of the same activity. We have mapped two of the mutations, called paf mutations for prevent alc function. They both map at about 90 min, probably in the rpoB gene encoding a subunit of RNA polymerase. From the behavior of Paf mutants, we hypothesize that the unf/alc gene product of T4 interacts somehow with the host RNA polymerase to block transcription of cytosine DNA and unfold the host nucleoid.

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