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A genetic switch with memory: the lysis/lysogeny switch in phage

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A genetic switch with memory: the lysis/lysogeny switch in phage . AMATH 882 Lecture 11, Feb. 12, 2013. Reference: A Genetic Switch , by Mark Ptashne. As an example of a genetic switch which can be triggered by a transient stimulus, we consider the case of phage . - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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A genetic switch with memory: the lysis/lysogeny switch in phage AMATH 882 Lecture 11, Feb. 12, 2013 Reference: A Genetic Switch, by Mark Ptashne
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Page 1: A genetic switch with memory: the lysis/lysogeny switch in phage

A genetic switch with memory:the lysis/lysogeny switch in

phage

AMATH 882

Lecture 11, Feb. 12, 2013

Reference: A Genetic Switch, by Mark Ptashne

Page 2: A genetic switch with memory: the lysis/lysogeny switch in phage

As an example of a genetic switch which can be triggered by a transient stimulus, we consider the case of phage

Phage is a bacteriophage -- a virus which infects E. coli.

Page 3: A genetic switch with memory: the lysis/lysogeny switch in phage

Phage Lambda: structure and infection

http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bild:T4-phage.jpg http://fig.cox.miami.edu/Faculty/Dana/phage.jpg

Page 4: A genetic switch with memory: the lysis/lysogeny switch in phage

Upon infection, the phage has two mechanisms of action:

Lytic Growth, in which the host’s genetic machinery is used to produce ~100 new phages, and then the host cell is lysed (broken).

Lysogeny, in which the phage chromosome is integrated into the host’s genome. The phage then dormantly infects all progeny, as its genome (called the prophage) is replicated when the host divides.

Page 5: A genetic switch with memory: the lysis/lysogeny switch in phage

The phage “chooses” between these two mechanisms based on a “reading” of the host’s behaviour. If the host is growing well the phage lysogenizes the host and subsequently infects all of its progeny. If the host is not growing well (e.g. starving), the phage grows lytically - an 'abandon ship' response.

This “decision” is based on a genetic switch.

Page 6: A genetic switch with memory: the lysis/lysogeny switch in phage

The switch is composed of two genes and their products:

Gene cI which codes for repressor

Gene cro which codes for Cro (control of repressor and others)

Page 7: A genetic switch with memory: the lysis/lysogeny switch in phage

These genes are adjacent to one another on the phage genome:

PR (the right promoter) is the promoter for cro

PRM (repressor maintenance) is the promotor for cI

Page 8: A genetic switch with memory: the lysis/lysogeny switch in phage

Both repressor and Cro regulate gene expression by binding to the the right operator OR, which is divided into three operator regions: OR1, OR2 and OR3

Page 9: A genetic switch with memory: the lysis/lysogeny switch in phage

Repressor protein folds into two domains (labeled amino (N) and carboxyl (C) for the two ends of the polypeptide chain). The carboxyl domains associate with one another, so that the protein is predominantly present as a dimer.

Page 10: A genetic switch with memory: the lysis/lysogeny switch in phage

These repressor dimers bind strongly to OR1 and weakly to OR2 and OR3 (about ten times less affinity).

Page 11: A genetic switch with memory: the lysis/lysogeny switch in phage

However, repressor bound to OR1 binds cooperatively to repressor at OR2 greatly increasing affinity for that site.

The result: at low to mid concentrations, repressor is bound to OR1 and OR2. Only at much higher levels is it also found bound to OR3.

Page 12: A genetic switch with memory: the lysis/lysogeny switch in phage

Effects of repressor binding:

repressor at OR1 inhibits Cro by blocking the binding site PR

Page 13: A genetic switch with memory: the lysis/lysogeny switch in phage

Effects of repressor binding:

repressor at OR2 upregulates cI by binding to RNA polymerase at PRM, increasing its affinity for the promoter

Thus at low-mid levels, repressor increases its own rate of production (positive feedback)

Page 14: A genetic switch with memory: the lysis/lysogeny switch in phage

Effects of repressor binding:

repressor at OR3 inhibits cI by blocking PRM.

Thus at high levels, repressor decreases its own rate of production (negative feedback)

Page 15: A genetic switch with memory: the lysis/lysogeny switch in phage

Conclusion: Repressor blocks production of Cro and acts to maintain its own concentration at a particular level. The result is a stable steady state -- repressor high, Cro low.

Page 16: A genetic switch with memory: the lysis/lysogeny switch in phage

Cro is a smaller protein than repressor, and folds into a single domain. Like repressor, it is found mainly in the form of a dimer.

Page 17: A genetic switch with memory: the lysis/lysogeny switch in phage

Also like repressor, dimers of Cro bind to each of the subregions of the right operator.

Page 18: A genetic switch with memory: the lysis/lysogeny switch in phage

However, Cro's affinity for these operator regions is opposite that of repressor. There are no cooperative effects. Affinity for OR1 and OR2 is roughly equal, and is less than that for OR3.

Page 19: A genetic switch with memory: the lysis/lysogeny switch in phage

Effects of Cro binding:

Cro at OR3 inhibits cI by blocking the binding site PRM

Page 20: A genetic switch with memory: the lysis/lysogeny switch in phage

At higher concentrations, Cro inhibits its own production by blocking RNA polyermase from PR. No upregulation is needed since PR has a much higher affinity for RNA polymerase than does PRM.

Page 21: A genetic switch with memory: the lysis/lysogeny switch in phage

Conclusion: Cro blocks production of repressor and acts to maintain its own concentration at a particular level. The result is a stable steady state -- repressor low, Cro high.

Page 22: A genetic switch with memory: the lysis/lysogeny switch in phage

Summary:

System is bistable, with two stable steady states:

lysogeny: repressor levels are high, cro inactive, levels of Cro low.

lysis: levels of Cro are high, cI inactive, levels of repressor low. Cro then triggers production of other phage genes needed to continue lytic growth.

Question: How does the phage switch from one state to the other?

Page 23: A genetic switch with memory: the lysis/lysogeny switch in phage

Hunger (or DNA damage, which can be induced in the lab by exposure to ultraviolet light) causes an increase in the activity of the bacterial (i.e. host) protease RecA. (A protease is an enzyme which degrades proteins). RecA cleaves repressor rendering it unable to dimerize and hence inactive.

Page 24: A genetic switch with memory: the lysis/lysogeny switch in phage

Once cleaved, repressor is unable to dimerize and so is inactive -- it cannot bind to DNA to promote its own production or to inhibit production of Cro.

Page 25: A genetic switch with memory: the lysis/lysogeny switch in phage

The all-or-nothing, as opposed to graded, behaviour of this induction by UV (or hunger) is a direct consequence of the cooperativity in the repressor mechanism. A hypothetical analog with no cooperativity does not lead to the same switch-like behaviour.

Page 26: A genetic switch with memory: the lysis/lysogeny switch in phage

Motivation: such genetic switches play a key role in development (growth of a multicellular organism from a single egg). An an egg divides, each cell receives the same genetic content (i.e. identical copies of DNA). What distinguishes different cell types is the complement of genes which are expressed.

Cell differentiation occurs when a cell "chooses" to express a certain gene profile. This "choice" is typically based on signals from the environment. These signals are often the result of gradients of chemical messengers (morphogens), which have been set up as part of development. A switch-like response allows a gradient to set up differentiation into a discrete number of cell types.

Page 27: A genetic switch with memory: the lysis/lysogeny switch in phage

morphogen gradient

response of genetic network

differentiation into two distinct cell types


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