Stability and gene strand bias of lambda prophages and chromosome organization in Escherichia coli

Author:

Li Xintian1,Gallardo Oscar2,August Elias3,Dassa Bareket4,Court Donald L.1,Stavans Joel2ORCID,Arbel-Goren Rinat2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Gene Regulation and Chromosome Biology Laboratory, National Cancer Institute, Frederick, Maryland, USA

2. Department of Physics of Complex Systems, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel

3. Department of Engineering, Reykjavik University, Reykjavík, Iceland

4. Department of Life Sciences Core Facilities, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel

Abstract

ABSTRACT Temperate phage-mediated horizontal gene transfer is a potent driver of genetic diversity in the evolution of bacteria. Most lambdoid prophages in Escherichia coli are integrated into the chromosome with the same orientation with respect to the direction of chromosomal replication, and their location on the chromosome is far from homogeneous. To better understand these features, we studied the interplay between lysogenic and lytic states of phage lambda in both native and inverted integration orientations at the wild-type integration site as well as at other sites on the bacterial chromosome. Measurements of free phage released by spontaneous induction showed that the stability of lysogenic states is affected by location and orientation along the chromosome, with stronger effects near the origin of replication. Competition experiments and range expansions between lysogenic strains with opposite orientations and insertion loci indicated that there are no major differences in growth. Moreover, measurements of the level of transcriptional bursts of the cI gene coding for the lambda phage repressor using single-molecule fluorescence in situ hybridization resulted in similar levels of transcription for both orientations and prophage location. We postulate that the preference for a given orientation and location is a result of a balance between the maintenance of lysogeny and the ability to lyse. IMPORTANCE The integration of genetic material of temperate bacterial viruses (phages) into the chromosomes of bacteria is a potent evolutionary force, allowing bacteria to acquire in one stroke new traits and restructure the information in their chromosomes. Puzzlingly, this genetic material is preferentially integrated in a particular orientation and at non-random sites on the bacterial chromosome. The work described here reveals that the interplay between the maintenance of the stability of the integrated phage, its ability to excise, and its localization along the chromosome plays a key role in setting chromosomal organization in Escherichia coli .

Funder

NIH Intramural Research Program

Kushner Fellowship

Siegfried and Irma Ullman Professorial Chair

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

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