Abstract
Most bacteriophages abruptly terminate their vegetative cycle by causing lysis of the host cell. The ssDNA phage φX174 uses a single lysis gene, E, encoding a 91-amino-acid membrane protein that causes lysis of Escherichia coli by inhibiting MraY, a conserved enzyme of murein biosynthesis. Recessive mutations in the host gene slyD (sensitivity to lysis) absolutely block E-mediated lysis and φX174 plaque formation. The slyD gene encodes a FKBP-type peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerase (PPIase). To investigate the molecular basis of this unique FKBP-dependence, spontaneous plaque-forming mutants of φX174 were isolated on a slyD lawn. All of these Epos ('plates on slyD') suppressors encode proteins with either a R3H or L19F change. The double mutant was also isolated and generated the largest plaques on the slyD lawn. A c-myc epitope tag sequence was incorporated into the parental E and Epos genes without effect on lytic function. Western blots and pulse-chase labelling experiments showed that both Epos and E are highly unstable in a slyD background; however, Epos is synthesized at a higher rate, allowing a lysis-sufficient level of Epos to accumulate. Our results indicate that SlyD is required for stabilizing the E protein and allowing it to accumulate to the levels required to exert its lytic effect. These data are discussed in terms of a model for the specific role of the SlyD PPIase in E folding, and of the use of the very strict SlyD-dependence phenotype for identifying elements of PPIase selectivity.
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CITATION STYLE
Bernhardt, T. G., Roof, W. D., & Young, R. (2002). The Escherichia coli FKBP-type PPIase SLyD is required for the stabilization of the E lysis protein of bacteriophage φX174. Molecular Microbiology, 45(1), 99–108. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2958.2002.02984.x
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