Site-specific Recombination in Phage Mu

  1. D. Kamp,
  2. L. T. Chow,
  3. T. R. Broker,
  4. D. Kwoh,
  5. D. Zipser, and
  6. R. Kahmann
  1. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, New York 11724

This extract was created in the absence of an abstract.

Excerpt

Integration of bacteriophage Mu into host DNA requires the expression of a specific recombination system, at least part of which is Mu encoded (Taylor 1963). The recombination event is site-specific with respect to the utilization of attachment sites located near the ends of Mu DNA; consequently, the prophage has a nonpermuted gene order. In contrast with respect to host sequences, the recombination appears to take place at random sites (Bukhari and Zipser 1972). A second site-specific recombination system is responsible for inversion of the G DNA segment of phage Mu. The G segment consists of 3000 base pairs of DNA flanked by short inverted duplications (Hsu and Davidson 1974). Inversion of the G segment is mediated by a Mu-encoded function called Gin (Kamp et al. 1978). We have described a mutant, Mu 445-5, which is unable to invert its G segment (Chow et al. 1977). This mutant can be complemented...

| Table of Contents