Abstract

The question whether the ends of bacteriophage Mu DNA are fused to form a ring in host cells is critical to the understanding of the mechanism of integrative recombination between Mu DNA and host DNA. We have examined the fate of 32P-labeled Mu DNA, after infection of sensitive and immune (lysogenic) cells, by sedimentation in sucrose gradients, ethidium bromide/CsCl density centrifugation and by electrophoresis of parental Mu DNA and its fragments in agarose gels. We find that the parental Mu DNA cannot be detected as covalently closed circles at any stage during the Mu life cycle. An interesting form of Mu DNA can be seen after superinfection of immune cells. This form sediments about twice as fast as the mature phage DNA marker in neutral sucrose gradients but yields linear molecules upon phenol extraction. Upon infection of sensitive cells, most of the parental DNA associates with a large complex, presumably containing the host chromosome. When Mu-sensitive cells are infected with unlabeled Mu particles and Mu DNA examined at different times after infection by fractionation in 0.3% agarose gels and hybridization with 32P-labeled Mu DNA, Mu sequences are found to appear with the bulk host DNA as the phage lytic cycle progresses. However, no distinct replicative or integrative intermediate of Mu, that behaves differently from linear Mu DNA and is separate from the host DNA, can be detected.

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