Lambda att2: a Transducing Phage Capable of Intramolecular int-xis Promoted Recombination
Abstract
As described earlier (Gottesman and Yarmolinsky, 1968), induction of a lysogen of λb2 yields primarily a dense phage which transduces the bacterial genes bio and uvrB. Production of this phage requires either red or rec function. The transducing phage in turn yields, at a low rate, nontransducing phage with the properties of the original phage parent λb2; this reversion is dependent on a functional int gene. On the basis of this instability it was proposed that the transducing phage denoted λb2att2 has the structure depicted in Fig. 1, and arises because normal excision is blocked by the defect in the right-hand attachment site of a λb2 prophage (Zichichi and Kellen-berger, 1963; Campbell, 1965; Fischer-Fantuzzi, 1967; Parkinson, 1970). As can be seen in Fig. 1, a transducing phage denoted λatt2, which arises by general recombination at homology regions outside the prophage attachment sites, would include the two hybrid attachment sites which bracket the prophage genome. The reversion of this transducing phage to the original nontransducing phage would be analogous to prophage excision, i.e., the result of recombination of these two attachment sites.
The slow rate of reversion of λb2att2 to λb2 would appear to be a consequence of the b2 attachment site defect. To obtain...
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PDFDOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/0.477-487