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Journal of Bacteriology, January 1999, p. 454-461, Vol. 181, No. 2
Department of Biological Sciences, University
of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15260
Received 6 July 1998/Accepted 6 November 1998
The temperate mycobacteriophage L5 integrates site specifically
into the genomes of Mycobacterium smegmatis,
Mycobacterium tuberculosis, and Mycobacterium
bovis bacillus Calmette-Guérin. This integrative
recombination event occurs between the phage L5 attP site
and the mycobacterial attB site and requires the phage-encoded integrase and mycobacterial-encoded integration host
factor mIHF. Here we show that attP, Int-L5, and mIHF
assemble into a recombinationally active complex, the intasome, which
is capable of attB capture and formation of products. The
arm-type integrase binding sites within attP play
specialized roles in the formation of specific protein-DNA
architectures; the intasome is constructed by the formation of
intramolecular integrase bridges between one pair of sites, P4-P5, and
the attP core, while an additional pair of sites, P1-P2, is
required for interaction with attB.
Establishment of lysogeny by
temperate bacteriophages involves site-specific recombination between a
phage attachment site (attP) and an attachment site in the
bacterial chromosome (attB) (9, 24). Typically,
the attP and attB sites have a short segment of
DNA sequence identity (the common core) within which strand exchange
occurs and which is also part of the attachment junctions,
attL and attR, that flank the integrated
prophage. Prophage excision involves a second site-specific
recombination event between attL and attR to
yield attP and attB as products (9,
24). While the mechanism of strand exchange is the same for
integrative and excisive recombination, the directionality of these
events must be carefully controlled to be in concert with other aspects
of the phage life cycle (14).
Site-specific recombinases can be grouped into two main classes on the
basis of amino acid similarities, the tyrosine recombinases (including
most of the phage integrases) and the serine recombinases (including
the resolvases-DNA invertases) (1, 29). Most, but not
all, bacteriophages utilize a member of this first group of proteins to
catalyze integration and excision (8, 15). While both types
of site-specific recombination reactions are utilized across a broad
range of biological systems, they must frequently satisfy the demands
of directionality, substrate choice, and timing (2, 14). The
serine recombinase family generally regulates these events
through topological specificity of the DNA substrates
(5), while most phage systems use complex DNA sites and
additional proteins to control the reactions (9). The
complexity of the DNA substrates involved in integrase-mediated recombination reflects the requirement for the assembly of specific protein-DNA architectures within which strand exchange can occur (10, 14).
Mycobacteriophage L5 is a temperate phage that infects
Mycobacterium smegmatis, Mycobacterium
tuberculosis, and Mycobacterium bovis bacillus
Calmette-Guérin (BCG) and forms stable lysogens in which the L5
genome is integrated site specifically into the mycobacterial
chromosome (4, 6, 12, 27). Recombination occurs within a
43-bp sequence common to attP and attB and is catalyzed by the phage-encoded integrase Int-L5 (11). The
region of L5 phage DNA containing attP includes multiple
binding sites for Int-L5 that span a 413-bp segment (19).
These integrase binding sites fall into two categories of sequence
identity: core-type sites, which overlap the sites of strand exchange
within the common core, and arm-type sites (P1-P7), which flank the
core (Fig. 1). However, a 246-bp segment
is fully active for integrative recombination and the P3 and P6-P7
sites are dispensable (19). While the attP site
of the well-studied bacteriophage
0021-9193/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Protein-DNA Complexes in Mycobacteriophage L5
Integrative Recombination
and
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ABSTRACT
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and methods
Results
Discussion
References
![]()
INTRODUCTION
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and methods
Results
Discussion
References
also contains arm- and core-type
Int binding sites, the specific locations, arrangements, and
orientations of the arm-type sites relative to those of the core are
quite different (23).

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FIG. 1.
Attachment sites in L5 integrative recombination. The
arrangements of arm-type (black and white boxes) and core-type (shaded
boxes) integrase binding sites in L5 attP and M. smegmatis attB and in the resulting attachment sites
attL and attR are shown. The relative
orientations of the arm-type sites are indicated by arrowheads. The
P1-P2 (spanning coordinates
115 to
135, where the central base pair
of the overlap region between the sites of strand exchange is defined
as 0) and P4-P5 (coordinates +90 to +110) pairs of sites are required
for integrative recombination (black boxes), whereas P3 and the P6-P7
pair are dispensable (white boxes).
The L5 integrase protein is a member of the family of prokaryotic
tyrosine recombinases and contains the four catalytic residues conserved throughout this group (11, 15). Although a distant relative of Int-
, Int-L5 has a similar overall organization, consisting of a small N-terminal domain (residues 1 to 58) which binds
sequence specifically to the arm-type sites and a larger C-terminal
domain (residues 59 to 371) which binds to the core-type sites and
contains the catalytic residues (19, 25). The two domains of
Int-L5 can bind to attP DNA simultaneously, producing large
complexes that fail to enter a nondenaturing polyacrylamide gel
(17). While Int-L5 stimulates recombination in vitro, it requires participation of the mycobacterial integration host factor (mIHF) (17). In contrast to the Escherichia coli
integration host factor (IHF) utilized in
integration
(13), the novel mIHF protein does not by itself bind with
any preference for attP DNA sequences (17).
However, when attP DNA is incubated in the presence of both
Int-L5 and mIHF, a tertiary complex (the intasome) is formed which has
a well-defined mobility in nondenaturing polyacrylamide gels
(17).
It has previously been shown that L5 integrative recombination is strongly stimulated in vitro when the attP substrate is supercoiled (11, 18). Since the intasome complex described above contains linear attP DNA, the question arises as to whether this complex is competent for recombination. Here we demonstrate that the L5 intasome is a noncovalently-associated recombination intermediate and is capable of interaction with attB and strand exchange. We also show that the arm-type sites play highly specialized roles in integration: the P4-P5 pair is required for assembly of the intasome, while the P1-P2 pair is required for association with the recombinational partner, attB.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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DNA fragments.
DNA fragments containing wild-type
attP (including sites P1 through P7) were generated by
cutting plasmid pMH94 (12) either with BamHI and
SalI or with just BamHI to give 612- and 624-bp fragments, respectively, or by cutting plasmid pCP7 (19)
with BamHI and EcoRI to give a 634-bp fragment.
DNA fragments (all 624 bp) containing substituted arm-type sites were
generated by cutting the following plasmids with BamHI:
pCP30, pCP31, pCP32, pCP33, pCP34, and pCP35, which have multiple
substitutions (at least 8 of 10 bp) in arm-type sites P1, P2, P3, P4,
P5, and P4-P5, respectively (19). DNA fragments containing
sites P1 to P5 (379 bp) or P3 to P5 (353 bp) were generated by cutting
plasmid pCP
L1 (19) with BamHI and
XcmI and plasmid pCP
L3 (19) with
HindIII and XcmI, respectively.
attB DNA fragments were generated by annealing pairs of
oligonucleotides (to give 29- and 45-bp fragments) as described
previously (20) or cut from plasmid pMH12.2 (a pUC119 derivative containing a 1.7-kb SalI attB fragment
from M. smegmatis) (12) with AvaII and
MseI to give a 126-bp fragment. DNA fragments were
radiolabeled on both ends (unless otherwise indicated), as needed,
either by phosphorylation or by end-fill with Klenow as described
previously (19).
In vitro integrative recombination reactions. Recombination assays were similar to those described previously (11). Reactions with supercoiled attP substrates were performed in a total volume of 20 µl and contained approximately 0.005 to 0.05 pmol (unless otherwise noted) of supercoiled plasmid containing attP, 0.06 pmol of attB, 0.07 to 0.23 pmol of purified Int-L5, and 3.6 to 12.0 pmol of purified mIHF. Reaction mixtures were incubated for 10 or 30 min (as indicated in Fig. 5C) at 37°C, the reactions were stopped by adding sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) to a final concentration of 0.1%, and the mixtures were electrophoresed through a 0.8% agarose gel.
Integrative recombination assays with linear attP DNAs contained the same components as described above, with the exceptions that approximately 0.024 pmol of attP was provided as a short, linear DNA fragment, 1 µg of salmon sperm DNA was added to each reaction, and the total reaction volume was 10 µl. The attP DNA was preincubated with Int-L5 and mIHF for 15 to 30 min either at room temperature or on ice, attB was added, and the entire reaction mixture was incubated at room temperature for 1 to 2 h (unless otherwise noted). Reaction mixtures were electrophoresed through a 5% polyacrylamide gel in 1× TBE (100 mM Tris-84 mM borate-1 mM EDTA), and products were visualized by autoradiography. Where indicated, reaction mixtures were treated either by the addition of SDS (final concentration, 0.5%) or proteinase K (final concentration, 1 mg/ml, followed by a 10-min incubation at 55°C) or by heating at 80°C for 10 min.Two-dimensional gel analysis. Protein-DNA complexes produced by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis were denatured by excising the desired lane from a wet gel and soaking it in 0.5% SDS for 10 min. The SDS-treated lane was then laid horizontally across the top of and electrophoresed through a 5% polyacrylamide-0.05% SDS gel in 1× TBE.
In situ DNase I footprinting. In situ DNase I footprinting was performed as described previously (7). The complexes were formed in reactions identical to those used for linear attP-containing integrative recombination by using a 379-bp P1 to P5 attP DNA 3' radiolabeled at the P1-proximal end, and mixtures were incubated for 15 min with a 45-bp attB DNA where appropriate. Complexes were separated by electrophoresis through a 1× TBE-5% polyacrylamide gel and visualized by autoradiography; gel slices containing individual complexes were excised and chopped into small pieces. To each footprinting reaction 30 µl of a solution containing 0.5-µg/ml DNase I in 10 mM Tris-0.5-mg/ml bovine serum albumin-2 mM dithiothreitol was added, and the reaction mixtures were incubated for 45 min. The cleavage reaction was started by the addition of 18 µl of 50 mM MgCl2-50 mM CaCl2, and the mixture was incubated for 4 min. The reaction was stopped by adding 30 µl of 0.5 M EDTA, incubating the mixture for 20 min, and then adding 30 µl of 1% SDS. All incubations were at room temperature. The digested DNA was electroeluted from the gel slices, ethanol precipitated, and electrophoresed through a 6 or 10% sequencing gel. Results were visualized by autoradiography and quantified by using NIH Image software (http://rsb.info.nih.gov/nih-image).
Construction of attP insertion mutants. A set of mutants containing insertions in the attP region of the 7,763-bp plasmid pGL1 (19) was constructed as described previously (19) by using the Muta-Gene Phagemid In Vitro Mutagenesis system (Bio-Rad). The mutagenic oligonucleotides were designed to insert 5 bp (to make plasmid pMK10), 7 bp (to make pMK7), or 13 bp (to make pMK9) between attP positions +50 and +51 (between the core and P4), introducing the unique restriction site NcoI (in the +5 and +7 bp insertions) or MluI (in the +13 bp insertion). In order to generate further insertion mutants, plasmids pMK10 and pMK7 were digested with NcoI, 3' filled to generate blunt ends, and religated, resulting in total insertions of +9 (plasmid pMK15) and +11 bp (pMK8), respectively.
Integrative transformation assays. In vivo integrative transformation assays were performed as described previously (19). Approximately 0.1 µg (0.025 pmol) of attP-containing plasmid (which also contains L5 int and lacks an origin of replication for mycobacteria) was electroporated into M. smegmatis mc2155 (27, 28) and recovered at 37°C, dilutions were plated on 7H10/ADC plates containing 0.5 µg of tetracycline (attP mutant plasmids pMK7, pMK8, pMK9, pMK10, and pMK15)/ml or 20 µg of kanamycin (wild-type attP plasmid pMH94)/ml, and transformants were scored after a 4- to 5-day incubation at 37°C.
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RESULTS |
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Recombinogenic potential of the L5 intasome. In order to test the recombinogenic potential of the intasome complex, intasomes were formed with radiolabeled attP DNA, Int-L5, and mIHF; attB DNA was added; and the products were analyzed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (Fig. 2A). Use of a 29-bp attB DNA (the minimal functional attB) (20) resulted in the appearance of several new bands, one of the strongest of which had the mobility predicted for a free attR product. The identity of this band as the attR product was confirmed by using attB DNAs of different sizes (45 and 126 bp); as the size of attB increased, the mobility of the putative attR product changed as predicted. This experiment demonstrates that integrative recombination occurs under these conditions.
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Characterization of an attB-containing complex. Addition of attB DNA to intasomes promotes the formation of a complex (complex 1) that migrates slightly slower than the intasome (Fig. 2). The mobility of this complex changes with the use of differently sized attB DNAs (Fig. 2A). Since this complex does not contain recombinant products or covalent intermediates (Fig. 2C), complex 1 could represent a quaternary complex containing both attB and attP DNAs (in addition to Int and mIHF). The presence of attB DNA in this complex was confirmed by radiolabeling both DNAs and examining the reaction products by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis (Fig. 3A). Additional support for the presence of attB in this complex and for identification of the recombinant products is provided by analysis of recombination reactions using radiolabeled attB and a nonradiolabeled attP DNA (Fig. 3B). Labeled products migrate in the positions of complex 1, the attL complex, and free attR DNA. These data confirm that complex 1 contains both attP and attB and show that its components are associated through noncovalent interactions. However, this quaternary complex does not behave kinetically as an intermediate in recombination, since it neither significantly accumulates nor decays during the course of the reaction (Fig. 2D).
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Arm-type Int binding sites involved in complex formation. The role of the arm-type Int binding sites in formation of the intasome and complex 1 was investigated by using a series of attP mutants containing multiple substitutions in individual arm-type sites (19). Interestingly, while both the P1 and the P2 mutants fail to undergo recombination, both are fully competent for intasome formation (Fig. 4A); the mobilities of the resulting intasomes are the same as with wild-type attP DNA, suggesting they have the same stoichiometry (Fig. 4A). In fact, both P1 and P2 can be completely removed without affecting intasome assembly (Fig. 4B). Not only are the P1-P2 sites dispensable for intasome formation, but in situ DNase I footprinting of the intasome demonstrates that they are unoccupied in this complex (Fig. 4C). The P4 site clearly is required for assembly of the intasome, and while the P5 mutant forms an intasome (Fig. 4A), it does not appear to be recombinogenic. The three arm-type sites P3, P6, and P7, which were previously shown to be dispensable for integration both in vivo and in vitro (using supercoiled DNA substrates) (19), are not required for the formation of any of the complexes or products shown in Fig. 4A and B.
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Recombination requires correct phasing of the core and P4-P5 sites. Formation of the attP intasome requires only the Int binding sites at the core and at the P4-P5 pair of arm-type sites. The sequence of the DNA between the core and the P4 site may not be important for integration but the size and resulting phasing may be critical if the two types of sites participate in Int-mediated protein bridges. This was confirmed by the analysis of a series of attP mutant derivatives in which the spacing was changed between the core and the P4-P5 pair of sites. Insertions were made between positions +50 and +51 in a region that is approximately midway between the P4 site and the crossover point (Fig. 5A) and is poorly protected in DNase I footprinting experiments (17). Five plasmids were generated in which the core-P4 spacing was increased by 5, 7, 9, 11, or 13 bp.
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DISCUSSION |
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Analysis of attP mutants lacking arm-type sites and footprinting analysis of the intasome strongly suggest that the P1-P2 pair of arm-type sites are neither required for nor occupied within the intasome structure. This was somewhat unexpected since the sites required for intasome formation, the core and P4-P5 arm-type sites, are the same as those present in the attachment junction attL. Thus, one of the substrate complexes, the attP intasome, appears to be identical to one of the product complexes, the attL intasome, which is a likely substrate for excision. Moreover, the attP intasome structure appears to be quite stable and remains essentially intact (as an attL complex) following recombination in vitro.
The intasome has two notable aspects to its structure. First, Int-L5 forms intramolecular bridges between the P4-P5 arm-type sites and the core, with mIHF stabilizing a sharp bend in the DNA between these sites (Fig. 6). Support for this structure is provided by the pattern of DNase I protection and the properties of mIHF (17). Further support for the formation of intramolecular protein bridges between the core and P4-P5 during the course of recombination is provided by the observed disruption of recombination upon the insertion of nonintegral numbers of helical turns between the core and P4-P5, while the insertion of approximately one helical turn restores recombination (Fig. 5).
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Integrative recombination requires both the P4 and P5 arm-type sites, and DNase I footprinting of the intasome shows that both sites are occupied. However, the P4- and P5-mutant substrates behave differently in intasome formation; the P4 site is required for intasome formation, but the mutant lacking P5 is able to form both the intasome and complex 1 even though no recombination is observed. The difference in the ability to form intasomes could perhaps be accounted for by differences in the affinity of Int for the individual P4 and P5 arm-type sites, or mutant sites, coupled with cooperative interactions between Int subunits. It is possible that the P5-mutant complexes fail to undergo recombination because they lack a critical protein bridge between the P5 site and one-half of the attP core (Fig. 6), although we note that the complexes have mobilities which are identical to those of complexes formed with wild-type attP and there is evidence that Int binds cooperatively to pairs of arm-type sites (19). An alternative explanation is that both P4 and P5 in the P5-mutant are occupied by Int (through cooperative interactions) but that specific interactions with the DNA are necessary, perhaps to ensure proper contacts between Int subunits.
The second feature of the intasome is that the P1-P2 sites are unoccupied. This is rather unusual, since Int-L5 will bind to these sites in the absence of mIHF when used at equivalent concentrations (16, 17). This could be explained by a possible requirement for Int-L5 to bind arm- and core-type sites simultaneously to form stable interactions, perhaps via allosteric communication between the two functional domains (indeed, in mobility shift assays Int-L5 cannot bind either attB DNA or P1-P2 DNA alone but can weakly form bimolecular complexes in an mIHF-independent manner; data not shown). Thus, one consequence of the participation of mIHF in promoting the intramolecular bridge shown in Fig. 5 is the exclusion of core-type sites from bridging with P1 and P2. We also note that the majority of attR, which contains the core and P1-P2 sites, is released as free DNA following recombination in vitro. The inability of attR to form a stable tertiary complex (equivalent to the attL complex shown in Fig. 6) may reflect the phasing of the binding sites, which would position Int protomers bound at the P4-P5 and P1-P2 sites on opposite faces of the DNA helix.
The P1-P2 sites are required for formation of a quaternary attP-attB-containing complex and are at least partially occupied in the structure, indicating that they play a key role in the interaction with attB. One plausible explanation is that an intermolecular Int-L5 bridge is formed between these sites; as with the intasome, we prefer the simple model that both protomers of Int-L5 bound to attB also contact P1 and P2, although other configurations cannot be excluded. The 50% occupancy of P1 and P2 is somewhat puzzling, but raises the intriguing possibility that the lack of coordinate binding of Int to both P1 and P2 could explain the apparent inability of this complex to proceed in the recombination pathway.
Examination of the attP sites of several other phages
suggests that the organization of the L5 integration structures which utilize two pairs of directly repeated arm-type sites (one pair on
either side of the core region, in the same relative orientation), may
be a common motif. The attP sites of phages P2
(30) and
Rv2 (21) contain only four arm-type
binding sites, placed in this arrangement. The attP site of
phage P22 (26) contains five arm-type sites, four arranged
in pairs (analogous to the P1-P2 and P4-P5 pairs of sites in L5) and
one individual site (with similar placement to the disposable P3 site
of L5). This raises the question as to whether all of these phages form
similar intasome structures. In contrast, the attP sites of
phages
(9) and HP1 (3) are more complex,
containing arm-type sites arranged as both pairs and as individual
sites, as direct and indirect repeats, and, in the case of HP1, with
multiple core-type binding sites; their corresponding integration
complexes may differ from the L5 structures.
Designing a model for L5 intasome function raises further differences
between L5 and
. During
integration the attB site is
not bound by Int-
independently but instead is captured as naked DNA
by integrase molecules which are bound into a preformed intasome via
their N-terminal domains and yet contain unsatisfied core-binding
domains (22). In contrast, the L5 intasome identified by gel
analysis does not appear to contain integrase molecules with
unsatisfied binding domains available for the capture of attB (unless they are held in place solely by
protein-protein interactions and therefore undetectable by DNase I
footprinting assays). Moreover, since Int-L5 does not appear to bind
stably to either attB alone or P1-P2 alone, binding of
Int-L5 to arm- and core-type sites must be unstable unless both binding
domains of Int-L5 are satisfied concurrently, and attB must
join the intasome complex by simultaneous binding of Int-L5 to both
attB and P1-P2.
Formation of these intasome and quaternary complex structures requires an unusual division of labor among the arm-type integrase binding sites. While little is known about excision of the L5 prophage, these structures allow us to consider possible models for the action of L5 excisionase. For example, excisionase might bind to the region between P2 and the core sites, promoting the formation of an attR tertiary complex which can synapse with an attL intasome (which may be identical to the attL complex identified here as a product of integration and essentially the same as that formed with attP). Alternatively, an excisionase may promote the formation of other protein-DNA complexes utilizing additional Int arm-type binding sites (such as P3 and P6-P7). An excisionase may also function to inhibit integrative recombination by similarly binding to attP DNA, promoting the formation of intramolecular bridges between P1-P2 and core and excluding the necessary P4-P5 interaction.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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We thank D. Lever for excellent technical assistance and M. Pedulla, G. Sarkis, and J. Lewis for helpful discussions.
This work was supported by grant GM49647 from the National Institutes of Health.
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FOOTNOTES |
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* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Biological Sciences, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15260. Phone: (412) 624-6975. Fax: (412) 624-4870. E-mail: GFH{at}vms.cis.pitt.edu.
Present address: Case Western Reserve University School of
Medicine, Cleveland, OH 44106.
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