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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., 11 1997, 4370-4376, Vol 63, No. 11
GM Djordjevic and TR Klaenhammer
A novel bacteriophage defense system, based on an inducible suicide gene,
was challenged with a lactococcal bacteriophage to investigate the
potential for phage adaptation. The defense system was encoded by pTRK414H,
a high-copy-number replicon encoding a tightly regulated phi 31p trigger
promoter fused to the lethal LlaIR+ restriction endonuclease cassette.
Repeated transfers of Lactococcus lactis NCK690(pTRK414H) in the presence
of phi 31 selected for phage phi 31 derivatives which were markedly less
sensitive to phi 31p-LlaIR(+)- encoded restriction than the parental phage,
phi 31. The efficiency of plaquing (EOP) on L. lactis NCK690(pTRK414H) was
10(-4) for phi 31 versus 0.4 for the derived phages. The mutant phages
remained fully sensitive to LlaIR+ restriction, suggesting an alteration in
the recognition or firing of the phi 31p promoter. Sequencing over the
promoter region in four mutant phages revealed the identical C-to-A
transversion, generating a Phe-to-Leu substitution, in a transcriptional
activator of the phi 31p promoter, designated ORF2. The mutant phages were
analyzed for their ability to induce the native phi 31p promoter element
fused to a lacZst reporter gene. Compared to the parental phage, phi 31,
lower levels of beta-galactosidase activity were induced throughout the
lytic cycle, indicating that the strength at which the mutant phages
activated the phi 31p promoter was altered. Based on these observations,
improvements were made in promoter strength and restriction activity in an
attempt to elevate the effectiveness of the phage-triggered suicide system.
When the phi 31p- LlaIR+ cassette was paired with other abortive defense
systems, Per31 and AbiA, the EOP of phi 31 was reduced to < 10(-10) and
the level of phage in the culture was lowered below the detection limits of
the assay.
Copyright © 1997, American Society for Microbiology
Bacteriophage-triggered defense systems: phage adaptation and design improvements
Department of Microbiology, North Carolina State University, Raleigh 27695-7624, USA.
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