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Interactions between Viral Regulatory Proteins Ensure an MOI-Independent Probability of Lysogeny during Infection by Bacteriophage P1

Phage P1 is a temperate phage which makes the lytic or lysogenic decision upon infecting bacteria. During the lytic cycle, progeny phages are produced and the cell lyses, and in the lysogenic cycle, P1 DNA exists as a low-copy-number plasmid and replicates autonomously. Previous studies at the bulk...

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Autores principales: Zhang, Kailun, Pankratz, Kiara, Duong, Hau, Theodore, Matthew, Guan, Jingwen, Jiang, Anxiao (Andrew), Lin, Yiruo, Zeng, Lanying
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8546580/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34517752
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mBio.01013-21
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author Zhang, Kailun
Pankratz, Kiara
Duong, Hau
Theodore, Matthew
Guan, Jingwen
Jiang, Anxiao (Andrew)
Lin, Yiruo
Zeng, Lanying
author_facet Zhang, Kailun
Pankratz, Kiara
Duong, Hau
Theodore, Matthew
Guan, Jingwen
Jiang, Anxiao (Andrew)
Lin, Yiruo
Zeng, Lanying
author_sort Zhang, Kailun
collection PubMed
description Phage P1 is a temperate phage which makes the lytic or lysogenic decision upon infecting bacteria. During the lytic cycle, progeny phages are produced and the cell lyses, and in the lysogenic cycle, P1 DNA exists as a low-copy-number plasmid and replicates autonomously. Previous studies at the bulk level showed that P1 lysogenization was independent of multiplicity of infection (MOI; the number of phages infecting a cell), whereas lysogenization probability of the paradigmatic phage λ increases with MOI. However, the mechanism underlying the P1 behavior is unclear. In this work, using a fluorescent reporter system, we demonstrated this P1 MOI-independent lysogenic response at the single-cell level. We further observed that the activity of the major repressor of lytic functions (C1) is a determining factor for the final cell fate. Specifically, the repression activity of P1, which arises from a combination of C1, the anti-repressor Coi, and the corepressor Lxc, remains constant for different MOI, which results in the MOI-independent lysogenic response. Additionally, by increasing the distance between phages that infect a single cell, we were able to engineer a λ-like, MOI-dependent lysogenization upon P1 infection. This suggests that the large separation of coinfecting phages attenuates the effective communication between them, allowing them to make decisions independently of each other. Our work establishes a highly quantitative framework to describe P1 lysogeny establishment. This system plays an important role in disseminating antibiotic resistance by P1-like plasmids and provides an alternative to the lifestyle of phage λ.
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spelling pubmed-85465802021-11-04 Interactions between Viral Regulatory Proteins Ensure an MOI-Independent Probability of Lysogeny during Infection by Bacteriophage P1 Zhang, Kailun Pankratz, Kiara Duong, Hau Theodore, Matthew Guan, Jingwen Jiang, Anxiao (Andrew) Lin, Yiruo Zeng, Lanying mBio Research Article Phage P1 is a temperate phage which makes the lytic or lysogenic decision upon infecting bacteria. During the lytic cycle, progeny phages are produced and the cell lyses, and in the lysogenic cycle, P1 DNA exists as a low-copy-number plasmid and replicates autonomously. Previous studies at the bulk level showed that P1 lysogenization was independent of multiplicity of infection (MOI; the number of phages infecting a cell), whereas lysogenization probability of the paradigmatic phage λ increases with MOI. However, the mechanism underlying the P1 behavior is unclear. In this work, using a fluorescent reporter system, we demonstrated this P1 MOI-independent lysogenic response at the single-cell level. We further observed that the activity of the major repressor of lytic functions (C1) is a determining factor for the final cell fate. Specifically, the repression activity of P1, which arises from a combination of C1, the anti-repressor Coi, and the corepressor Lxc, remains constant for different MOI, which results in the MOI-independent lysogenic response. Additionally, by increasing the distance between phages that infect a single cell, we were able to engineer a λ-like, MOI-dependent lysogenization upon P1 infection. This suggests that the large separation of coinfecting phages attenuates the effective communication between them, allowing them to make decisions independently of each other. Our work establishes a highly quantitative framework to describe P1 lysogeny establishment. This system plays an important role in disseminating antibiotic resistance by P1-like plasmids and provides an alternative to the lifestyle of phage λ. American Society for Microbiology 2021-09-14 /pmc/articles/PMC8546580/ /pubmed/34517752 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mBio.01013-21 Text en Copyright © 2021 Zhang et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
Zhang, Kailun
Pankratz, Kiara
Duong, Hau
Theodore, Matthew
Guan, Jingwen
Jiang, Anxiao (Andrew)
Lin, Yiruo
Zeng, Lanying
Interactions between Viral Regulatory Proteins Ensure an MOI-Independent Probability of Lysogeny during Infection by Bacteriophage P1
title Interactions between Viral Regulatory Proteins Ensure an MOI-Independent Probability of Lysogeny during Infection by Bacteriophage P1
title_full Interactions between Viral Regulatory Proteins Ensure an MOI-Independent Probability of Lysogeny during Infection by Bacteriophage P1
title_fullStr Interactions between Viral Regulatory Proteins Ensure an MOI-Independent Probability of Lysogeny during Infection by Bacteriophage P1
title_full_unstemmed Interactions between Viral Regulatory Proteins Ensure an MOI-Independent Probability of Lysogeny during Infection by Bacteriophage P1
title_short Interactions between Viral Regulatory Proteins Ensure an MOI-Independent Probability of Lysogeny during Infection by Bacteriophage P1
title_sort interactions between viral regulatory proteins ensure an moi-independent probability of lysogeny during infection by bacteriophage p1
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8546580/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34517752
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mBio.01013-21
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