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J. Virol., Apr 1995, 2322-2327, Vol 69, No. 4
SD Nuttall and ML Dyall-Smith
Halophage HF2 is a lytic, broad-host-range bacteriophage of the extremely
halophilic domain Archaea. It has a 79.7-kb double-stranded DNA genome
which is linear, contains no modified nucleotides, and is not susceptible
to cleavage by many type II restriction endonucleases. This insensitivity
is attributed to selection against palindromic restriction sites, a
commonly observed feature of broad-host-range phages. Interestingly,
enzymes that did cut the genome recognized AT- rich sites, and five such
enzymes, DraI, AseI, HpaI, HindIII, and SspI, were used to construct a
physical map of the genome. Southern hybridization experiments used to
order fragments on the map indicated homologies between the phage termini,
and subsequent sequence analysis showed that HF2 possessed 306-bp direct
terminal repeats. The presence of such repeats suggested replication
through concatameric intermediates, and this was confirmed by analysis of
the state of the phage genome in infected cells. This is a replication
strategy adopted by many well-studied bacterial phages, for example T3 and
T7. Other similarities between the terminal repeats of T3 or T7 and HF2
include a putative nick site at the repeat border and a series of short
imperfect repeats. These observations suggest a long evolutionary history
for concatamer-based strategies of phage replication, possibly predating
the divergence of Archaea/Eucarya and Bacteria, or alternatively, indicate
possible lateral transfer of phage genes or modules between the domains
Archaea and Bacteria.
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
Halophage HF2: genome organization and replication strategy
Department of Microbiology, University of Melbourne, Parkville, Australia.
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