Research Article

Relationship Among Temperate Agrobacterium Phage Genomes and Coat Proteins

Journal of General Virology 1972; 16(2):199 · https://doi.org/10.1099/0022-1317-16-2-199

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Abstract

The four phages, omega, PS8, PB2A and LV-1, were indistinguishable. They possess a hexagonal head of about 70 nm. with a flexible tail about 200 nm. long. Their DNA had a Tm of 92.7° ± 0.1°, a % GC of 56.7 ± 0.2, a mol. wt of 34.1 x 106 and comprised the four normal bases A, T, G and C. No evidence was found for repetitive units in PB2A. These four genome DNA types gave 100% hybridization (limit of error 6%). The electrophoretic protein profiles on SDS polyacrylamide gels are essentially identical: four major bands with similar mol. wt. About half of the phage protein has a mol. wt of 48,000 (perhaps a major head protein), about one-third has a mol. wt of 30,000, one sixth has a mol. wt of 15,500 and 4% has a mol. wt of 69,000. No omega-type prophage DNA was detectable in the cured bacteria V-IC by DNA:DNA hybridization. The latter bacteria were as pathogenic as the prophage-containing parent strain V-I, which throws some doubt on the role of the omega phage group in crown gall induction.

The phage-like particle P0362, isolated from the pathogenic Agrobacterium tumefaciens 0362 had a 60 to 70 nm. head and a straight 130 nm. tail. Its DNA was double-stranded with a slightly lower Tm of 92.4°, a mol. wt of 25 x 106. The electrophoretic profiles of coat proteins differed from those of the other phages. Its DNA is less than 17% homologous with the omega group. The eventual role of this phage in crown gall induction remains to be established.

The phage-like particle P8149, isolated from the non-pathogenic Agrobacterium radiobacter NCIB 8149, was quite different. The bipyramidal head was much smaller (40 nm. diameter) and had a very short bud-like tail. The DNA was double-stranded, with a Tm of 93.9°, a mol. wt of 10 x 106. The electrophoretic profile of the coat proteins differed from those of the other phages. The DNA does not hybridize with the omega group. As this phage was isolated from a non-pathogenic A. radiobacter, it probably has no function in crown gall. A. radiobacter 8149 is bilysogenic.

* Present address: Department of Microbiology, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Penn. 16801, U.S.A.