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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, February 2001, p. 791-798, Vol. 67, No. 2
Department of Microbiology, Oregon State University,
Corvallis, Oregon 97331-3804, and Western Dairy Center,
Utah State University, Logan, Utah
Received 18 May 2000/Accepted 20 October 2000
An unusual, spontaneous, phage sk1-resistant mutant (RMSK1/1) of
Lactococcus lactis C2 apparently blocks phage DNA entry
into the host. Although no visible plaques formed on RMSK1/1, this host
propagated phage at a reduced efficiency. This was evident from
center-of-infection experiments, which showed that 21% of infected
RMSK1/1 formed plaques when plated on its phage-sensitive parental
strain, C2. Moreover, viable cell counts 0 and 4 h after infection
were not significantly different from those of an uninfected culture.
Further characterization showed that phage adsorption was normal, but
burst size was reduced fivefold and the latent period was increased
from 28.5 to 36 min. RMSK1/1 was resistant to other, but not all,
similar phages. Phage sensitivity was restored to RMSK1/1 by
transformation with a cloned DNA fragment from a genomic library of a
phage-sensitive strain. Characterization of the DNA that restored phage
sensitivity revealed an open reading frame with similarity to sequences
encoding lysozymes (
0099-2240/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.67.2.791-798.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Cloning of Genomic DNA of Lactococcus
lactis That Restores Phage Sensitivity to an Unusual Bacteriophage
sk1-Resistant Mutant
-1,4-N-acetylmuramidase) and lysins
from various bacteria, a fungus, and phages of
Lactobacillus and Streptococcus and also
revealed DNA homologous to noncoding sequences of temperate phage of
L. lactis, DNA similar to a region of phage sk1, a gene
with similarity to tRNA genes, a prophage attachment site, and open
reading frames with similarities to sun and to sequences
encoding phosphoprotein phosphatases and protein kinases. Mutational
analyses of the cloned DNA showed that the region of homology with
lactococcal temperate phage was responsible for restoring the
phage-sensitive phenotype. The region of homology with DNA of
lactococcal temperate phage was similar to DNA from a previously
characterized lactococcal phage that suppresses an abortive infection
mechanism of phage resistance. The region of homology with lactococcal
temperate phage was deleted from a phage-sensitive strain, but the
strain was not phage resistant. The results suggest that the cloned DNA
with homology to lactococcal temperate phage was not mutated in the
phage-resistant strain. The cloned DNA apparently suppressed the
mechanism of resistance, and it may do so by mimicking a region of
phage DNA that interacts with components of the resistance mechanism.
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Microbiology, Nash Hall 220, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR
97331-3804. Phone: (541) 737-1845. Fax: (541) 737-0496. E-mail:
gellerb{at}orst.edu.
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