Transcriptional activator II | |
Organism: | Escherichia virus Lambda |
Taxid: | 10710 |
Symbol: | cII |
Entrezgene: | 2703494 |
Pdb: | 1ZPQ |
Refseqprotein: | NP_040630.1 |
Uniprot: | P03042 |
Chromosome: | genomic |
Entrezchromosome: | NC_001416.1 |
Genloc Start: | 38315 |
Genloc End: | 38696 |
cII or transcriptional activator II is a DNA-binding protein and important transcription factor in the life cycle of lambda phage.[1] It is encoded in the lambda phage genome by the 291 base pair cII gene.[2] cII plays a key role in determining whether the bacteriophage will incorporate its genome into its host and lie dormant (lysogeny), or replicate and kill the host (lysis).[3]
cII is the central “switchman” in the lambda phage bistable genetic switch, allowing environmental and cellular conditions to factor into the decision to lysogenize or to lyse its host.[4] cII acts as a transcriptional activator of three promoters on the phage genome: pI, pRE, and pAQ. cII is an unstable protein with a half-life as short as 1.5 mins at 37˚C,[5] enabling rapid fluctuations in its concentration. First isolated in 1982,[6] cII's function in lambda's regulatory network has been extensively studied.
cII binds DNA as a tetramer, composed of identical 11 kDa subunits.[7] Although the cII gene encodes 97 codons, the mature cII protein subunit only contains 95 amino acids due to post-translational cleavage of the first two amino acids (fMet and Val). cII is toxic to bacteria when overexpressed, as it inhibits DNA synthesis.[8]
cII binds to a homologous region 35 base pairs upstream of the promoters pI, pRE and pAQ. Unlike other DNA binding proteins, cII recognizes a direct repeat sequence TTGCN6TTGC rather than sequences that form palindromes. cII binds DNA ~2 orders of magnitude less strongly than the lambda repressor cI (3), and has a dissociation constant of ~80nM. DNA binding is achieved using the common helix-turn-helix motif (15), located between residues 26 and 45. On either side of the DNA-binding domain are domains crucial for tetramer formation, located in residues 9-25 and 46–71. cII's inherent in vivo instability stems from a C-terminal degradation tag, consisting of residues 89–97. This tag is recognized by host proteases HflA and HflB, cause rapid proteolysis cII.[9] Although the C-terminal tag is still accessible when cII is tetramerized (13), the rate of proteolytic degradation decreases, since Hfl proteases only degrade cII monomers.[9]
cII's primary role in the lambda phage regulatory network is to initiate the repressor establishment cascade. Once lysogeny is established, cII is no longer needed, and thus is turned off. It serves as the switch element for establishing repression of the lytic genes after infection, producing the lysogenic phenotype.
cII is first expressed after phage protein N reaches sufficient levels to antiterminate the early right transcript past tR1, allowing RNA polymerase to transcribe the cII gene.[10] If cII levels reach a certain threshold level, expression through the promoters pI, pRE and pAQ will be induced, initiating the two actions necessary in establishing lysogeny: 1) repression of lytic genes and 2) integration of the phage genome into the host's chromosome.[11] Activation of promoter pRE enables expression of the repressor protein cI, which shuts off all lytic genes. pRE activation is also accompanied with a ~2 fold drop in pR activity due to convergent transcription of the two promoters, decreasing the expression of the lytic genes O and P.[12] Activation of promoter pAQ produces the antisense RNA for Q, a key protein in the activation of the late lytic genes. Production of antisense Q RNA shuts off Q production, reducing lytic activity until the repressor cI can adequately shut off all lytic gene expression.[13] Activation of the promoter pI causes the expression of the phage protein Int, whose role is to integrate the phage genome into the host's chromosome. Thus, although cII levels play a large role in determining the cell's fate, random thermal fluctuations also partially determine whether lysis or lysogeny is chosen.
The level of cII in the cell during infection is highly variable due to its inherent in vivo instability, and its levels are highly influenced by environmental and cellular factors that influence its degradation rate. Such factors include temperature,[14] cellular starvation and number of phage infecting the cell (an indication of population number of phage). Experiments have shown that low temperatures increase the in vivo half-life of cII from ~1-2 mins at 37˚C to 20 mins at 20˚C, thus increasing the probability of a cell to lysogenize. It is postulated that cII's increased stability at lower temperatures may be due to increased tetramerization and/or decreased Hfl-protease activity. Similarly, because host Hfl-proteases degrade proteins in an ATP dependent manner, coupling cII levels to Hfl-protease activity allows the bacteriophage to sense the energy status of the cell (healthy or starved).[15] Thus lysogeny is favored when cells are starved. Finally, if a bacterial cell is infected by multiple bacteriophages, the level of cII increases due to additional contributions from each infecting phage. Lysogeny is therefore also favored in cells infected by multiple phages.
cII levels during infection exhibit extensive post-transcriptional regulation.