Abstract

The phospholipid composition of cytoplasmic membranes prepared from bacteria grown in the presence of [ 32P]phosphate and infected with f1 wild type and f1 amber mutant bacteriophages was determined. Ninety minutes after infection with f1 amber mutants in genes 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7 the percentage of cardiolipin was increased from the level in uninfected bacteria of 5% to about 20–35%, and the percentage of phosphatidylethanolamine was decreased from 70% to about 50–60%. The phospholipid composition of cytoplasmic membranes from bacteria infected with a phage containing an amber mutation in the coat cistron (gene 8) did not differ from that of uninfected bacteria. Although late in infection there were no detectable alterations in phospholipid metabolism in wild type infected bacteria, transient alterations in phospholipid metabolism occurred in these bacteria 10 to 20 min after infection. During this time period, the f1 coat protein was found to be rapidly synthesized but was not being packaged into mature phage and released from bacteria. Both the long-term alterations of phospholipid metabolism found in the amber mutant infected bacteria and the transient alterations found in wild-type infected bacteria resulted from an increase in the rate of synthesis of phosphatidylglycerol and cardiolipin and a decrease in the rate of synthesis of phosphatidylethanolamine. These results are discussed in terms of the relationship between the accumulation of f1 coat protein in infected bacteria and the observed alterations in phospholipid metabolism.

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