Virtually all colicins are carried on
plasmids. The two general classes of
colicinogenic plasmids are large, low-copy-number plasmids, and small, high-copy-number plasmids. The larger plasmids carry other genes, as well as the colicin operon. The colicin operons are generally organized with several major
genes. These include a colicin structural gene, an immunity gene, and a
bacteriocin release protein (BRP), or
lysis, gene. The immunity gene is often produced constitutively, while the BRP is generally produced only as a read-through of the
stop codon on the colicin structural gene. The colicin itself is repressed by the
SOS response and may be regulated in other ways as well. Retaining the colicin plasmid is very important for cells that live with their relatives, because if a cell loses the immunity gene, it quickly becomes subject to destruction by circulating colicin. At the same time, colicin is only released from a producing cell by the use of the lysis protein, which results in that cell's death. This suicidal production mechanism would appear to be very costly, except for the fact that it is regulated by the
SOS response, which responds to significant
DNA damage. In short, colicin production may only occur in terminally ill cells. The Professor Kleanthous Research Group at the
University of Oxford study colicins extensively as a model system for characterising and investigating protein-protein interactions and recognition. BACTIBASE database is an open-access database for bacteriocins including colicins (view complete list). == References ==