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Published July 24, 2012 | Accepted Version + Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

A Single-Molecule Hershey-Chase Experiment

Abstract

Ever since Hershey and Chase used phages to establish DNA as the carrier of genetic information in 1952, the precise mechanisms of phage DNA translocation have been a mystery. While bulk measurements have set a time scale for in vivo DNA translocation during bacteriophage infection, measurements of DNA ejection by single bacteriophages have only been made in vitro. Here, we present direct visualization of single bacteriophages infecting individual Escherichia coli cells. For bacteriophage lambda, we establish a mean ejection time of roughly 5 minutes with significant cell-to-cell variability, including pausing events. In contrast, corresponding in vitro single-molecule ejections take only 10 seconds to reach completion and do not exhibit significant variability. Our data reveal that the velocity of ejection for two different genome lengths collapses onto a single curve. This suggests that in vivo ejections are controlled by the amount of DNA ejected, in contrast with in vitro DNA ejections, which are governed by the amount of DNA left inside the capsid. This analysis provides evidence against a purely intrastrand repulsion based mechanism, and suggests that cell-internal processes dominate. This provides a picture of the early stages of phage infection and sheds light on the problem of polymer translocation.

Additional Information

© 2012 Elsevier B.V. Received 23 March 2012. Revised 18 April 2012. Accepted 10 May 2012. Available online 21 June 2012. Published online: June 21, 2012. We are grateful to a number of people for help with experiments, advice, and critical commentary on the manuscript including: Heun Jin Lee, Maja Bialecka, Phillips lab, Talia Weiss, Vilawain Fernandes, Kari Barlan, Paul Grayson, Ido Golding, Lanying Zeng, Bill Gelbart, Chuck Knobler, Francois St. Pierre, and Drew Endy. We are also grateful to Ron Vale, Tim Mitchison, Dyche Mullins, and Clare Waterman as well as several generations of students from the MBL Physiology Course where this work has been developed over several summers. We also gratefully acknowledge financial support from several sources, including a NIH Medical Scientist Training Program Fellowship, a Yaser Abu-Mostafa Hertz Fellowship, and a NIH Director's Pioneer Award. We also acknowledge the support of NSF grant number 0758343.

Attached Files

Accepted Version - nihms-388521.pdf

Supplemental Material - DocumentS1.pdf

Supplemental Material - MovieS1.avi

Supplemental Material - MovieS2.avi

Supplemental Material - MovieS3.avi

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August 19, 2023
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