λ uses host RNAP (does not make its own), modifies termination rather than promoter specificity, and uses anti-terminators N & Q to extend transcripts.
Cro represses PL and PR, stopping early transcripts once late genes (pR2/pR′) turn on.
Origin oriR in gene O, O/P recruit and “pirate” host DnaB, and replication shifts from θ to rolling circle, producing concatemers. Gam inhibits RecBCD to allow RCR.
Memory tip: O = “Origin organizer,” P = “Pirate of helicase.”
N vs CII/CI and Cro vs CI competition define whether repression or lytic transcription dominates.
CII activates pRE (CI synthesis), pI (integrase), and is stabilized by CIII which protects it from HflA/B proteases.
CII has a short half-life (~2 min) and is degraded by HflA/HflB, so only stable CII can activate CI and initiate lysogeny.
Connection: CII is the “decision node” because CI expression depends on CII.
High MOI, host mutants that stabilize CII (e.g., HflA/HflB defects), and starvation before infection (increases lysogeny 50–100×).
Lytic: N & Cro expressed → CII degraded → low CI → PR/PL ON → replication.
Lysogeny: CII stabilized → CI expressed → PR/PL OFF → integration occurs.
Int binds attP, is a type I topoisomerase, and catalyzes site-specific recombination between attP and attB.
A protein–DNA complex containing Int + both att sites (attP & attB) brought together for recombination.
Int nicks both sites, strand exchange occurs, a Holliday junction forms, and resolution produces BOP′ + POB′ (recombinants).
CII activates pI, allowing efficient integrase expression only when conditions favor lysogeny.
Excision requires Xis, which alters DNA binding specificity and enables Int to recombine attL & attR instead of attP/attB.
It is an excisionase, forms a complex with Int, and promotes recombination at attL/attR (reverse reaction).
CI shuts off PL, CII activates pI (inside xis gene → no Xis), and RNA degradation prevents Int/Xis buildup during integration.
Regulation in which sequences downstream of a gene control stability of its mRNA, here affecting int/xis RNAs.
PL transcript extends across attP via N; RNase III cleaves; RNase II degrades downstream RNA, eliminating int/xis transcripts.
The genome is reorganized so the RNase III site is no longer adjacent to attB/P, so PL transcripts now produce stable xis RNA after induction.
“Circular hides the cut site” — once integrated, RNase III can’t clip Int/Xis RNA until induction.
ssDNA activates RecA*, CI undergoes autocleavage, and PR/PL turn ON, expressing N, Cro, Int, and Xis.
RecA* is required for CI cleavage, so without it λ cannot exit lysogeny.
PL is ON and the RNase III cleavage site is repositioned, so PL transcripts are not degraded.
Nutrient state, host protease levels (HflA/B), and multiplicity of infection.
High CI → lysogeny (PR/PL OFF), high Cro → lysis (CI OFF). Each represses the promoter of the other.
Early infection (N, Cro expressed), competition phase (CII stability determines CI), and final outcome: lytic (Cro wins) or lysogenic (CI wins).
CII is the decider, CI is the maintainer, Cro is the lytic promoter.
Test ability to infect lysogens: vir mutants form plaques on lysogens, while cI/cII/cIII mutants do not.
Vir mutations prevent CI binding, so incoming phage ignores immunity and undergoes lytic growth.
Superinfection provides necessary anti-repressors or additional regulatory factors to overcome strong immunity and trigger induction.
CII is rapidly degraded → CI is not made → lytic cycle favored.
CIII no longer protects CII → CII unstable → lysogeny drops dramatically.
λ cannot integrate → only lytic cycle occurs, even if CI is produced.
PL transcript not degraded → Int/Xis accumulate prematurely → integration becomes inefficient.
CI cannot be inactivated → prophage becomes non-inducible (defective induction).
Xis promotes excision → prophage cannot stabilize → lysogeny fails
λ cannot integrate → strictly lytic infection
Very high CI production → lysogeny frequency skyrockets.
Cro fails to repress pRM → CI continues being produced → lysogeny more likely.
Early termination cannot be bypassed → delayed early genes (O, P, Q) not expressed → lytic cycle collapses.
CI cleavage insufficient → partial induction or no induction → prophage remains lysogenic.
Xis/Int levels drop → defective excision → phage cannot efficiently enter lytic cycle.
CII stabilized + multiple phage genomes → lysogeny strongly favored.
Excision fails, because attL/attR are excision-specific recombination sites.
Incoming phage lacks immunity target → lysogen’s CI represses it → no productive infection.
