Structure and function of the repressor of bacteriophage lambda. II. Isolation and characterization of a lambda mutant which produces repressor having higher affinity for operators. 1984

D K Nag, and D J Chattopadhyay, and N C Mandal

By mutagenizing a lambda cIts (lambda cI857) lysogen, a lambda mutant has been isolated with a wild-type phenotype. This mutant phage lysogenizes with low efficiency and produces a low burst. Though the initial rates of repressor synthesis in Escherichia coli after infection with wild-type and mutant lambda are the same, the maximum level of repressor that is synthesized in the latter case is only about 30% of that synthesized in the former. Virulent lambda plates on the lysogen of mutant lambda with slightly less efficiency producing very tiny plaques. Operator-binding studies made in vitro with purified mutant and wild-type repressors show that the binding curve of the former repressor is a rectangular hyperbola while that of the latter is sigmoid. The half-lives of the complexes of mutant and wild-type repressors with right operator are 133 and 27 min, respectively. All these results suggest that the mutant repressor possibly has a higher affinity for the operators. This mutant has been named lambda cIha (ha = high affinity).

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D008242 Lysogeny The phenomenon by which a temperate phage incorporates itself into the DNA of a bacterial host, establishing a kind of symbiotic relation between PROPHAGE and bacterium which results in the perpetuation of the prophage in all the descendants of the bacterium. Upon induction (VIRUS ACTIVATION) by various agents, such as ultraviolet radiation, the phage is released, which then becomes virulent and lyses the bacterium. Integration, Prophage,Prophage Integration,Integrations, Prophage,Prophage Integrations
D009876 Operon In bacteria, a group of metabolically related genes, with a common promoter, whose transcription into a single polycistronic MESSENGER RNA is under the control of an OPERATOR REGION. Operons
D010582 Bacteriophage lambda A temperate inducible phage and type species of the genus lambda-like viruses, in the family SIPHOVIRIDAE. Its natural host is E. coli K12. Its VIRION contains linear double-stranded DNA with single-stranded 12-base 5' sticky ends. The DNA circularizes on infection. Coliphage lambda,Enterobacteria phage lambda,Phage lambda,lambda Phage
D012097 Repressor Proteins Proteins which maintain the transcriptional quiescence of specific GENES or OPERONS. Classical repressor proteins are DNA-binding proteins that are normally bound to the OPERATOR REGION of an operon, or the ENHANCER SEQUENCES of a gene until a signal occurs that causes their release. Repressor Molecules,Transcriptional Silencing Factors,Proteins, Repressor,Silencing Factors, Transcriptional
D004268 DNA-Binding Proteins Proteins which bind to DNA. The family includes proteins which bind to both double- and single-stranded DNA and also includes specific DNA binding proteins in serum which can be used as markers for malignant diseases. DNA Helix Destabilizing Proteins,DNA-Binding Protein,Single-Stranded DNA Binding Proteins,DNA Binding Protein,DNA Single-Stranded Binding Protein,SS DNA BP,Single-Stranded DNA-Binding Protein,Binding Protein, DNA,DNA Binding Proteins,DNA Single Stranded Binding Protein,DNA-Binding Protein, Single-Stranded,Protein, DNA-Binding,Single Stranded DNA Binding Protein,Single Stranded DNA Binding Proteins
D004279 DNA, Viral Deoxyribonucleic acid that makes up the genetic material of viruses. Viral DNA
D014157 Transcription Factors Endogenous substances, usually proteins, which are effective in the initiation, stimulation, or termination of the genetic transcription process. Transcription Factor,Factor, Transcription,Factors, Transcription
D014764 Viral Proteins Proteins found in any species of virus. Gene Products, Viral,Viral Gene Products,Viral Gene Proteins,Viral Protein,Protein, Viral,Proteins, Viral
D054334 Viral Regulatory and Accessory Proteins A broad category of viral proteins that play indirect roles in the biological processes and activities of viruses. Included here are proteins that either regulate the expression of viral genes or are involved in modifying host cell functions. Many of the proteins in this category serve multiple functions. Viral Accessory Proteins,Viral Regulatory Proteins,Regulatory Proteins, Viral,Accessory Proteins, Viral,Proteins, Viral Accessory,Proteins, Viral Regulatory

Related Publications

D K Nag, and D J Chattopadhyay, and N C Mandal
January 1973, Harvey lectures,
D K Nag, and D J Chattopadhyay, and N C Mandal
May 1973, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America,
D K Nag, and D J Chattopadhyay, and N C Mandal
June 1975, Cell,
D K Nag, and D J Chattopadhyay, and N C Mandal
October 1976, Science (New York, N.Y.),
D K Nag, and D J Chattopadhyay, and N C Mandal
January 1977, Nucleic acids research,
D K Nag, and D J Chattopadhyay, and N C Mandal
November 1973, Virology,
D K Nag, and D J Chattopadhyay, and N C Mandal
January 2013, Transcription,
D K Nag, and D J Chattopadhyay, and N C Mandal
January 1982, Doklady Akademii nauk SSSR,
D K Nag, and D J Chattopadhyay, and N C Mandal
January 1988, The Journal of biological chemistry,
Copied contents to your clipboard!