Genetic evidence that recognition of cosQ, the signal for termination of phage λ DNA packaging, depends on the extent of head filling

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Abstract

Packaging a phage λ chromosome involves cutting the chromosome from a concatemer and translocating the DNA into a prohead. The cutting site, cos, consists of three subsites: cosN, the nicking site; cosB, a site required for packaging initiation; and cosQ, a site required for termination of packaging. cosB contains three binding sites (R sequences) for gpNul, the small subunit of terminase. Because cosQ has sequence identity to the R sequences, it has been proposed that cosQ is also recognized by gpNul. Suppressors of cosB mutations were unable to suppress a cosQ point mutation. Suppressors of a cosQ mutation (cosQ1) were isolated and found to be of three sorts, the first affecting a base pair in cosQ. The second type of cosQ suppression involved increasing the length of the phage chromosome to a length near to the maximum capacity of the head shell. A third class of suppressors were missense mutations in gene B, which encodes the portal protein of the virion. It is speculated that increasing DNA length and altering the portal protein may reduce the rate of translocation, thereby increasing the efficiency of recognition of the mutant cosQ. None of the cosQ suppressors was able to suppress cosB mutations. Because cosQ and cosB mutations are suppressed by very different types of suppressors, it is concluded that cosQ and the R sequences of cosB are recognized by different DNA-binding determinants.

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Cue, D., & Feiss, M. (1997). Genetic evidence that recognition of cosQ, the signal for termination of phage λ DNA packaging, depends on the extent of head filling. Genetics, 147(1), 7–17. https://doi.org/10.1093/genetics/147.1.7

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