Type III Restriction Is Alleviated by Bacteriophage (RecE) Homologous Recombination Function but Enhanced by Bacterial (RecBCD) Function
Open Access
- 1 November 2005
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Journal of Bacteriology
- Vol. 187 (21) , 7362-7373
- https://doi.org/10.1128/jb.187.21.7362-7373.2005
Abstract
Previous works have demonstrated that DNA breaks generated by restriction enzymes stimulate, and are repaired by, homologous recombination with an intact, homologous DNA region through the function of lambdoid bacteriophages lambda and Rac. In the present work, we examined the effect of bacteriophage functions, expressed in bacterial cells, on restriction of an infecting tester phage in a simple plaque formation assay. The efficiency of plaque formation on an Escherichia coli host carrying EcoRI, a type II restriction system, is not increased by the presence of Rac prophage—presumably because, under the single-infection conditions of the plaque assay, a broken phage DNA cannot find a homologue with which to recombine. To our surprise, however, we found that the efficiency of plaque formation in the presence of a type III restriction system, EcoP1 or EcoP15, is increased by the bacteriophage-mediated homologous recombination functions recE and recT of Rac prophage. This type III restriction alleviation does not depend on lar on Rac, unlike type I restriction alleviation. On the other hand, bacterial RecBCD-homologous recombination function enhances type III restriction. These results led us to hypothesize that the action of type III restriction enzymes takes place on replicated or replicating DNA in vivo and leaves daughter DNAs with breaks at nonallelic sites, that bacteriophage-mediated homologous recombination reconstitutes an intact DNA from them, and that RecBCD exonuclease blocks this repair by degradation from the restriction breaks.Keywords
This publication has 69 references indexed in Scilit:
- Type II restriction endonucleases: structure and mechanismCellular and Molecular Life Sciences, 2005
- Evolutionary Role of Restriction/Modification Systems as Revealed by Comparative Genome AnalysisGenome Research, 2001
- On the structure and operation of type I DNA restriction enzymesJournal of Molecular Biology, 1999
- Mutations in the Res subunit of the Eco PI restriction enzyme that affect ATP-dependent reactions 1 1Edited by J. KarnJournal of Molecular Biology, 1997
- Posttranscriptional Regulation ofEcoP1I andEcoP15I Restriction ActivityJournal of Molecular Biology, 1996
- Endonuclease (R) subunits of type‐I and type‐III restriction‐modification enzymes contain a helicase‐like domainFEBS Letters, 1991
- Type III DNA restriction and modification systems EcoP1 and EcoP15Journal of Molecular Biology, 1988
- Modification enhancement by the restriction alleviation protein (Ral) of bacteriophage λJournal of Molecular Biology, 1986
- Methylation and cleavage sequences of the EcoP1 restriction-modification enzymeJournal of Molecular Biology, 1979
- Mechanism localisation and control of restriction cleavage of phage T4 and λ chromosomes in vivoNature, 1976