Bacteriophage lambda site-specific recombination.
Gregory D Van DuyneArthur LandyPublished in: Molecular microbiology (2024)
The site-specific recombination pathway of bacteriophage λ encompasses isoenergetic but highly directional and tightly regulated integrative and excisive reactions that integrate and excise the vial chromosome into and out of the bacterial chromosome. The reactions require 240 bp of phage DNA and 21 bp of bacterial DNA comprising 16 protein binding sites that are differentially used in each pathway by the phage-encoded Int and Xis proteins and the host-encoded integration host factor and factor for inversion stimulation proteins. Structures of higher-order protein-DNA complexes of the four-way Holliday junction recombination intermediates provided clarifying insights into the mechanisms, directionality, and regulation of these two pathways, which are tightly linked to the physiology of the bacterial host cell. Here we review our current understanding of the mechanisms responsible for regulating and executing λ site-specific recombination, with an emphasis on key studies completed over the last decade.
Keyphrases
- dna repair
- circulating tumor
- dna damage
- cell free
- single molecule
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- copy number
- nucleic acid
- protein protein
- single cell
- amino acid
- high resolution
- circulating tumor cells
- magnetic resonance
- transcription factor
- magnetic resonance imaging
- stem cells
- small molecule
- mesenchymal stem cells
- mass spectrometry
- bone marrow