Litcius/Paper detail

Bacteriophage tRNA-dependent lysogeny: requirement of phage-encoded tRNA genes for establishment of lysogeny

Carlos A. Guerrero-Bustamante, Graham F. Hatfull

2024mBio33 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Bacteriophages are the most numerous biological entities in the biosphere, and a substantial proportion of phages are temperate, forming stable lysogens in which a prophage copy of the genome integrates into the bacterial chromosome. Many phages encode a variety of tRNA genes whose roles are poorly understood, although it has been proposed that they enhance translational efficiencies in lytic growth or that they counteract host defenses that degrade host tRNAs. Here, we show that phage-encoded tRNAs play key roles in the establishment of lysogeny of some temperate phages. They do so by compensating for the loss of tRNA function when phages integrate at an attB site overlapping a tRNA gene but fail to reconstruct the tRNA at the attachment junction. In this system of tRNA-dependent lysogeny, the phage-encoded tRNA is required for lysogeny, and deletion of the phage tRNA gives rise to a clear plaque phenotype and obligate lytic growth.

Topics & Concepts

Lysogenic cycleBacteriophageTransfer RNAGeneBiologyGeneticsMicrobiologyEscherichia coliRNABacteriophages and microbial interactionsRNA and protein synthesis mechanismsGenomics and Phylogenetic Studies