Abstract
A single-copy chromosomal reporter system was used to measure the intrinsic strengths and interactions between the three promoters involved in the establishment of lysogeny by coliphage 186. The maintenance lysogenic promoter p(L) for the immunity repressor gene cI is intrinsically approximately 20-fold weaker than the lytic promoter p(R). These promoters are arranged face-to-face, and transcription from p(L) is further weakened some 14-fold by the activity of p(R). Efficient establishment of lysogeny requires the p(E) promoter, which lies upstream of p(L) and is activated by the phage CII protein to a level comparable to that of p(R). Transcription of p(E) is less sensitive to converging p(R) transcription and raises cI transcription at least 55-fold. The p(E) promoter does not occlude p(L) but inhibits lytic transcription by 50%. This interference is not due to bound CII preventing elongation of the lytic transcript. The p(E) RNA is antisense to the anti-immune repressor gene apl, but any role of this in the establishment of lysogeny appears to be minimal.
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