Abstract
The role of the T4D bacteriophage gene 28 product in folate metabolism in infected E. coli cells was investigated using antifolate drugs and a newly devised assay for folyl polyglutamate cleavage activity. Preincubation of host E. coli cells with various sulfa drugs inhibited phage production by decreasing the burst size when the phage particles produced an altered gene 28 product (i.e., after infection under permissive conditions with T4D 28ts or T4D am28). Another folate analog, pyrimethamine, also inhibited T4D 28ts production and T4D 28am production, but this analog did not inhibit wild-type T4D production. A temperature-resistant revertant of T4D 28ts was not sensitive to either sulfa drugs or pyrimethamine. An assay to measure the enzymatic cleavage of folyl polyglutamates was developed. The MW folyl polyglutamate substrate was isolated from E. coli B cells infected with T4D am28 in the presence of labeled glutamic acid and was characterized as a folate compound containing 12-14 labeled glutamate residues. Extracts of uninfected bacteria liberated glutamate residues from this substrate with a pH optimum of 8.4-8.5. Extracts of bacteriophage T4D-infected E. coli B cells exhibited an additional new folyl polyglutamate cleavage activity with a pH optimum of .apprx. 6.4-6.5, which was clearly distinguished from the preexisting activity in the uninfected host cells. This new activity was induced in E. coli B cells by infection with wild-type T4D and T4D amber mutants 29-, 26-, 27-, 51- and 10-, but it was not induced under nonpermissive conditions by T4D am28 or by T4D 28ts. Mutations in gene 28 affected the properties of the induced cleavage enzyme. Wild-type T4D-induced cleavage activity was not inhibited by pyrimethamine; the T4D 28ts activity induced at a permissive temperature was inhibited by this folate analog. Folyl polyglutamate cleavage activity characteristic of the activity induced in host cells by wild-type T4D or by T4D gene 28 mutants was also found in highly purified preparations of these phage ghost particles. The T4D-induced cleavage activity could be inhibited by antiserum prepared against highly purified phage baseplates. T4D infection apparently induced the formation of a new folyl polyglutamate cleavage enzyme and this enzyme was coded for by T4D gene 28. Since this gene product was a baseplate tail plug component which had both its antigenic sites and its catalytic sites exposed on the phage particle, it was apparent that this enzyme formed part of the distal surface of the phage baseplate central tail plug.