A mutation in the Escherichia coli rho gene that inhibits the N protein activity of phage λ

  1. Asis Das*,
  2. Max E. Gottesman,
  3. Judith Wardwell*,
  4. Patsy Trisler, and
  5. Susan Gottesman
  1. *Department of Microbiology, University of Connecticut School of Medicine, Farmington, Connecticut 06032
  2. Laboratory of Molecular Biology, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20205

Abstract

Certain Escherichia coli rho mutations, exemplified by rho026, block the growth of phage λ by interfering with phage gene expression. The phage gene N, whose product suppresses transcription termination, appears to be expressed normally in the mutants, and the functional stability of the N protein is not affected. Our data suggest that these rho mutations allow transcription to terminate despite the presence of N. Other E. coli mutants displaying a similar phenotype (Nus-) fail to propagate wild-type λ but permit the growth of the λ variant λnin5, which has undergone a deletion of the λ terminator t R2. The phenotype of the rho026 mutant differs: the growth of λ is only marginally improved by the nin5 deletion. Interestingly, N activity at rho-independent terminators is not inhibited by the mutations, whereas its ability to suppress rho-dependent terminators is markedly reduced. The relevance of this specificity in terms of models of N action is discussed.

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