The lambda red proteins promote efficient recombination between diverged sequences: implications for bacteriophage genome mosaicism.

Genome mosaicism in temperate bacterial viruses (bacteriophages) is so great that it obscures their phylogeny at the genome level. However, the precise molecular processes underlying this mosaicism are unknown. Illegitimate recombination has been proposed, but homeologous recombination could also be...

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Main Authors: Jann T Martinsohn, Miroslav Radman, Marie-Agnès Petit
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2008-05-01
Series:PLoS Genetics
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2327257?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-6b6e4c08b8ca43519ee78965a17384c12020-11-25T02:01:21ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Genetics1553-73901553-74042008-05-0145e100006510.1371/journal.pgen.1000065The lambda red proteins promote efficient recombination between diverged sequences: implications for bacteriophage genome mosaicism.Jann T MartinsohnMiroslav RadmanMarie-Agnès PetitGenome mosaicism in temperate bacterial viruses (bacteriophages) is so great that it obscures their phylogeny at the genome level. However, the precise molecular processes underlying this mosaicism are unknown. Illegitimate recombination has been proposed, but homeologous recombination could also be at play. To test this, we have measured the efficiency of homeologous recombination between diverged oxa gene pairs inserted into lambda. High yields of recombinants between 22% diverged genes have been obtained when the virus Red Gam pathway was active, and 100 fold less when the host Escherichia coli RecABCD pathway was active. The recombination editing proteins, MutS and UvrD, showed only marginal effects on lambda recombination. Thus, escape from host editing contributes to the high proficiency of virus recombination. Moreover, our bioinformatics study suggests that homeologous recombination between similar lambdoid viruses has created part of their mosaicism. We therefore propose that the remarkable propensity of the lambda-encoded Red and Gam proteins to recombine diverged DNA is effectively contributing to mosaicism, and more generally, that a correlation may exist between virus genome mosaicism and the presence of Red/Gam-like systems.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2327257?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jann T Martinsohn
Miroslav Radman
Marie-Agnès Petit
spellingShingle Jann T Martinsohn
Miroslav Radman
Marie-Agnès Petit
The lambda red proteins promote efficient recombination between diverged sequences: implications for bacteriophage genome mosaicism.
PLoS Genetics
author_facet Jann T Martinsohn
Miroslav Radman
Marie-Agnès Petit
author_sort Jann T Martinsohn
title The lambda red proteins promote efficient recombination between diverged sequences: implications for bacteriophage genome mosaicism.
title_short The lambda red proteins promote efficient recombination between diverged sequences: implications for bacteriophage genome mosaicism.
title_full The lambda red proteins promote efficient recombination between diverged sequences: implications for bacteriophage genome mosaicism.
title_fullStr The lambda red proteins promote efficient recombination between diverged sequences: implications for bacteriophage genome mosaicism.
title_full_unstemmed The lambda red proteins promote efficient recombination between diverged sequences: implications for bacteriophage genome mosaicism.
title_sort lambda red proteins promote efficient recombination between diverged sequences: implications for bacteriophage genome mosaicism.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Genetics
issn 1553-7390
1553-7404
publishDate 2008-05-01
description Genome mosaicism in temperate bacterial viruses (bacteriophages) is so great that it obscures their phylogeny at the genome level. However, the precise molecular processes underlying this mosaicism are unknown. Illegitimate recombination has been proposed, but homeologous recombination could also be at play. To test this, we have measured the efficiency of homeologous recombination between diverged oxa gene pairs inserted into lambda. High yields of recombinants between 22% diverged genes have been obtained when the virus Red Gam pathway was active, and 100 fold less when the host Escherichia coli RecABCD pathway was active. The recombination editing proteins, MutS and UvrD, showed only marginal effects on lambda recombination. Thus, escape from host editing contributes to the high proficiency of virus recombination. Moreover, our bioinformatics study suggests that homeologous recombination between similar lambdoid viruses has created part of their mosaicism. We therefore propose that the remarkable propensity of the lambda-encoded Red and Gam proteins to recombine diverged DNA is effectively contributing to mosaicism, and more generally, that a correlation may exist between virus genome mosaicism and the presence of Red/Gam-like systems.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2327257?pdf=render
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