4.8 Article

A phage mechanism for selective nicking of dUMP-containing DNA

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2026354118

Keywords

T5 bacteriophage; ung; endonuclease; toxic protein; AP site

Funding

  1. European Research Council under the European Union [818878, 714224]
  2. Israeli Ministry of Science [3-14351]
  3. Israeli Ministry of Health [15370]
  4. Edmond J. Safra Center for Bioinformatics at Tel Aviv University by the Dalia and Eli Hurvitz Foundation
  5. European Research Council (ERC) [714224, 818878] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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Bacteriophages have evolved efficient means to take over the machinery of the bacterial host. Through the study of a bacterial growth inhibitor gene product T5.015 encoded by the T5 phage, it was found that growth inhibition mediated by T5.015 depends on the uracil-excision activity of Ung, leading to DNA replication and cell division arrest.
Bacteriophages (phages) have evolved efficient means to take over the machinery of the bacterial host. The molecular tools at their disposal may be applied to manipulate bacteria and to divert molecular pathways at will. Here, we describe a bacterial growth inhibitor, gene product T5.015, encoded by the T5 phage. Highthroughput sequencing of genomic DNA of bacterial mutants, resistant to this inhibitor, revealed disruptive mutations in the Escherichia coli ung gene, suggesting that growth inhibition mediated by T5.015 depends on the uracil-excision activity of Ung. We validated that growth inhibition is abrogated in the absence of ung and confirmed physical binding of Ung by T5.015. In addition, biochemical assays with T5.015 and Ung indicated that T5.015 mediates endonucleolytic activity at abasic sites generated by the base-excision activity of Ung. Importantly, the growth inhibition resulting from the endonucleolytic activity is manifested by DNA replication and cell division arrest. We speculate that the phage uses this protein to selectively cause cleavage of the host DNA, which possesses more misincorporated uracils than that of the phage. This protein may also enhance phage utilization of the available resources in the infected cell, since halting replication saves nucleotides, and stopping cell division maintains both daughters of a dividing cell.

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