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1.
Tailed bacteriophages and herpesviruses consist of a structurally well conserved dodecameric portal at a special 5-fold vertex of the capsid. The portal plays critical roles in head assembly, genome packaging, neck/tail attachment, and genome ejection. Although the structures of portals from phages φ29, SPP1, and P22 have been determined, their mechanistic roles have not been well understood. Structural analysis of phage T4 portal (gp20) has been hampered because of its unusual interaction with the Escherichia coli inner membrane. Here, we predict atomic models for the T4 portal monomer and dodecamer, and we fit the dodecamer into the cryo-electron microscopy density of the phage portal vertex. The core structure, like that from other phages, is cone shaped with the wider end containing the “wing” and “crown” domains inside the phage head. A long “stem” encloses a central channel, and a narrow “stalk” protrudes outside the capsid. A biochemical approach was developed to analyze portal function by incorporating plasmid-expressed portal protein into phage heads and determining the effect of mutations on head assembly, DNA translocation, and virion production. We found that the protruding loops of the stalk domain are involved in assembling the DNA packaging motor. A loop that connects the stalk to the channel might be required for communication between the motor and the portal. The “tunnel” loops that project into the channel are essential for sealing the packaged head. These studies established that the portal is required throughout the DNA packaging process, with different domains participating at different stages of genome packaging.  相似文献   

2.
Architecturally conserved viral portal dodecamers are central to capsid assembly and DNA packaging. To examine bacteriophage T4 portal functions, we constructed, expressed and assembled portal gene 20 fusion proteins. C-terminally fused (gp20-GFP, gp20-HOC) and N-terminally fused (GFP-gp20 and HOC-gp20) portal fusion proteins assembled in vivo into active phage. Phage assembled C-terminal fusion proteins were inaccessible to trypsin whereas assembled N-terminal fusions were accessible to trypsin, consistent with locations inside and outside the capsid respectively. Both N- and C-terminal fusions required coassembly into portals with approximately 50% wild-type (WT) or near WT-sized 20am truncated portal proteins to yield active phage. Trypsin digestion of HOC-gp20 portal fusion phage showed comparable protection of the HOC and gp20 portions of the proteolysed HOC-gp20 fusion, suggesting both proteins occupy protected capsid positions, at both the portal and the proximal HOC capsid-binding sites. The external portal location of the HOC portion of the HOC-gp20 fusion phage was confirmed by anti-HOC immuno-gold labelling studies that showed a gold 'necklace' around the phage capsid portal. Analysis of HOC-gp20-containing proheads showed increased HOC protein protection from trypsin degradation only after prohead expansion, indicating incorporation of HOC-gp20 portal fusion protein to protective proximal HOC-binding sites following this maturation. These proheads also showed no DNA packaging defect in vitro as compared with WT. Retention of function of phage and prohead portals with bulky internal (C-terminal) and external (N-terminal) fusion protein extensions, particularly of apparently capsid tethered portals, challenges the portal rotation requirement of some hypothetical DNA packaging mechanisms.  相似文献   

3.
V B Rao  L W Black 《Cell》1985,42(3):967-977
A phage T4 DNA packaging enzyme appears to arise as a processed form of the major T4 capsid structural protein gp23. The enzyme activity and antigen are missing from all head gene mutants that block the morphogenetic proteolytic processing reactions of the head proteins in vivo. The enzyme antigen can be formed in vitro by T4 (gp21) specific processing of gp23 containing extracts. Enzyme antigen is found in active processed proheads but not in full heads. The enzyme and the major capsid protein show immunological cross-reactivity, produce common peptides upon proteolysis, and share an assembly-conformation-dependent ATP binding site. The packaging enzyme and the mature capsid protein (gp23*) both appear to arise from processing of gp23, the former as a minor product of a specific gp23 structure in the prohead, acting in DNA packaging as a DNA-dependent ATPase, and a headful-dependent terminase.  相似文献   

4.
The development of bacteriophage lambda and double-stranded DNA viruses in general involves the convergence of two separate pathways: DNA replication and head assembly. Clearly, packaging will proceed only if an empty capsid shell, the prohead, is present to receive the DNA, but genetic evidence suggests that proheads play another role in the packaging process. For example, lambda phages with an amber mutation in any head gene or in FI, the gene encoding the accessory packaging protein gpFI, are able to produce normal amounts of DNA concatemers but they are not cut, or matured, into unit length chromosomes for packaging. Similar observations have been made for herpes simplex 1 virus. In the case of lambda, a negative model proposes that in the amber phages, unassembled capsid components are inhibitory to maturation, and a positive model suggests that assembled proheads are required for cutting. We tested the negative model by using a deletion mutant devoid of all prohead genes and FI in an in vivo cos cleavage assay; in this deleted phage, the cohesive ends were not cut. When lambda proheads and gpFI were provided in vivo via a second prophage, cutting was restored, and gpFI was required, results that support the positive model. Phage 21 is a sister phage of lambda, and although its capsid proteins share approximately 60% residue identity with lambda's, phage 21 proheads did not restore cutting, even when provided with the accessory protein gpFI. Models for the role of proheads and gpFI in cos cutting are discussed.  相似文献   

5.
In double-stranded DNA bacteriophages the viral DNA is translocated into an empty prohead shell by a powerful ATP-driven motor assembled at the unique portal vertex. Terminases consisting of two to three packaging-related ATPase sites are central to the packaging mechanism. But the nature of the key translocating ATPase, stoichiometry of packaging motor, and basic mechanism of DNA encapsidation are poorly understood. A defined phage T4 packaging system consisting of only two components, proheads and large terminase protein (gp17; 70 kDa), is constructed. Using the large expanded prohead, this system packages any linear double-stranded DNA, including the 171 kb T4 DNA. The small terminase protein, gp16 (18 kDa), is not only not required but also strongly inhibitory. An ATPase activity is stimulated when proheads, gp17, and DNA are actively engaged in the DNA packaging mode. No packaging ATPase was stimulated by the N-terminal gp17-ATPase mutants, K166G (Walker A), D255E (Walker B), E256Q (catalytic carboxylate), D255E-E256D and D255E-E256Q (Walker B and catalytic carboxylate), nor could these sponsor DNA encapsidation. Experiments with the two gp17 domains, N-terminal ATPase domain and C-terminal nuclease domain, suggest that terminase association with the prohead portal and communication between the domains are essential for ATPase stimulation. These data for the first time established an energetic linkage between packaging stimulation of N-terminal ATPase and DNA translocation. A core pathway for the assembly of functional DNA translocating motor is proposed. Since the catalytic motifs of the N-terminal ATPase are highly conserved among >200 large terminase sequences analyzed, these may represent common themes in phage and herpes viral DNA translocation.  相似文献   

6.
The developmental pathways for a variety of eukaryotic and prokaryotic double-stranded DNA viruses include packaging of viral DNA into a preformed procapsid structure, catalyzed by terminase enzymes and fueled by ATP hydrolysis. In most instances, a capsid expansion process accompanies DNA packaging, which significantly increases the volume of the capsid to accommodate the full-length viral genome. “Decoration” proteins add to the surface of the expanded capsid lattice, and the terminase motors tightly package DNA, generating up to ∼ 20 atm of internal capsid pressure. Herein we describe biochemical studies on genome packaging using bacteriophage λ as a model system. Kinetic analysis suggests that the packaging motor possesses at least four ATPase catalytic sites that act cooperatively to effect DNA translocation, and that the motor is highly processive. While not required for DNA translocation into the capsid, the phage λ capsid decoration protein gpD is essential for the packaging of the penultimate 8-10 kb (15-20%) of the viral genome; virtually no DNA is packaged in the absence of gpD when large DNA substrates are used, most likely due to a loss of capsid structural integrity. Finally, we show that ATP hydrolysis is required to retain the genome in a packaged state subsequent to condensation within the capsid. Presumably, the packaging motor continues to “idle” at the genome end and to maintain a positive pressure towards the packaged state. Surprisingly, ADP, guanosine triphosphate, and the nonhydrolyzable ATP analog 5'-adenylyl-beta,gamma-imidodiphosphate (AMP-PNP) similarly stabilize the packaged viral genome despite the fact that they fail to support genome packaging. In contrast, the poorly hydrolyzed ATP analog ATP-γS only partially stabilizes the nucleocapsid, and a DNA is released in “quantized” steps. We interpret the ensemble of data to indicate that (i) the viral procapsid possesses a degree of plasticity that is required to accommodate the packaging of large DNA substrates; (ii) the gpD decoration protein is required to stabilize the fully expanded capsid; and (iii) nucleotides regulate high-affinity DNA binding interactions that are required to maintain DNA in the packaged state.  相似文献   

7.
The bacteriophage T3 DNA packaging system in vitro defined here is composed of purified proheads and two non-capsid proteins, the products of genes 18 and 19 (gp18 and gp19). In this system, a precursor complex (50 S complex) accumulates in the presence of adenosine 5'-O-(3'-thiotriphosphate) (ATP-gamma-S), a non-hydrolyzable analog of ATP. The 50 S complex is converted to a filled head in the presence of ATP. The conversion of the 50 S complex, formed by preincubation with ATP-gamma-S, to the mature head proceeds in a synchronous manner after the addition of ATP. The lag time for formation of mature heads from the 50 S complex is 1.8, 4.5 and 6.8 minutes at 30, 25 and 20 degrees C, respectively. DNA is translocated into the capsid at a constant rate of 5.7 x 10(3) base-pairs per minute at 20 degrees C. The conversion of the 50 S complex to the mature head exhibits a sigmoidal relationship with respect to the concentration of ATP, the concentration for half-maximal activity being about 20 microM. The transition of the prohead to the expanded capsid occurs at 20 degrees C at one minute 40 seconds after the initiation of DNA translocation, when one-fourth of the genome has been packaged into a prohead. At the same time, the capsid-DNA complex becomes stable to high concentrations of salt. When DNA translocation is interrupted by the addition of ATP-gamma-S, packaged DNA exists at 0 degrees C as well as at 20 degrees C but the exit of DNA stops after one-third of the genome is inside the capsid. After exit, DNA is retranslocated into the expanded capsid by the addition of ATP at a rate of about 5.7 x 10(3) base-pairs per minute at 20 degrees C. The decrease in concentration of ATP interrupts DNA translocation into the capsid but does not induce DNA exit. Interrupted DNA translocation may be reinitiated by the addition of ATP. DNA exit is not induced by the addition of ATP-gamma-S to mature heads or partially filled heads pretreated with DNase.  相似文献   

8.
DNA packaging by double-stranded DNA bacteriophages and herpesviruses is driven by a powerful molecular machine assembled at the portal vertex of the empty prohead. The phage T4 packaging machine consists of three components: dodecameric portal (gp20), pentameric large terminase motor (gp17), and 11- or 12-meric small terminase (gp16). These components dynamically interact and orchestrate a complex series of reactions to produce a DNA-filled head containing one viral genome per head. Here, we analyzed the interactions between the portal and motor proteins using a direct binding assay, mutagenesis, and structural analyses. Our results show that a portal binding site is located in the ATP hydrolysis-controlling subdomain II of gp17. Mutations at key residues of this site lead to temperature-sensitive or null phenotypes. A conserved helix-turn-helix (HLH) that is part of this site interacts with the portal. A recombinant HLH peptide competes with gp17 for portal binding and blocks DNA translocation. The helices apparently provide specificity to capture the cognate prohead, whereas the loop residues communicate the portal interaction to the ATPase center. These observations lead to a hypothesis in which a unique HLH-portal interaction in the symmetrically mismatched complex acts as a lever to position the arginine finger and trigger ATP hydrolysis. Transiently connecting the critical parts of the motor; subdomain I (ATP binding), subdomain II (controlling ATP hydrolysis), and C-domain (DNA movement), the portal-motor interactions might ensure tight coupling between ATP hydrolysis and DNA translocation.  相似文献   

9.
Moore SD  Prevelige PE 《Journal of virology》2002,76(20):10245-10255
Bacteriophage with linear, double-stranded DNA genomes package DNA into preassembled protein shells called procapsids. Located at one vertex in the procapsid is a portal complex composed of a ring of 12 subunits of portal protein. The portal complex serves as a docking site for the DNA packaging enzymes, a conduit for the passage of DNA, and a binding site for the phage tail. An excess of the P22 portal protein alters the assembly pathway of the procapsid, giving rise to defective procapsid-like particles and aberrant heads. In the present study, we report the isolation of escape mutant phage that are able to replicate more efficiently than wild-type phage in the presence of excess portal protein. The escape mutations all mapped to the same phage genome segment spanning the portal, scaffold, coat, and open reading frame 69 genes. The mutations present in five of the escape mutants were determined by DNA sequencing. Interestingly, each mutant contained the same mutation in the scaffold gene, which changes the glycine at position 287 to glutamate. This mutation alone conferred an escape phenotype, and the heads assembled by phage harboring only this mutation had reduced levels of portal protein and exhibited increased head assembly fidelity in the presence of excess portal protein. Because this mutation resides in a region of scaffold protein necessary for coat protein binding, these findings suggest that the P22 scaffold protein may define the portal vertices in an indirect manner, possibly by regulating the fidelity of coat protein polymerization.  相似文献   

10.
Tailed bacteriophages use powerful molecular motors to package the viral genome into a preformed capsid. Packaging at a rate of up to ~2000 bp/s and generating a power density twice that of an automobile engine, the phage T4 motor is the fastest and most powerful reported to date. Central to DNA packaging are dynamic interactions among the packaging components, capsid (gp23), portal (gp20), motor (gp17, large "terminase"), and regulator (gp16, small terminase), leading to precise orchestration of the packaging process, but the mechanisms are poorly understood. Here we analyzed the interactions between small and large terminases of T4-related phages. Our results show that the gp17 packaging ATPase is maximally stimulated by homologous, but not heterologous, gp16. Multiple interaction sites are identified in both gp16 and gp17. The specificity determinants in gp16 are clustered in the diverged N- and C-terminal domains (regions I-III). Swapping of diverged region(s), such as replacing C-terminal RB49 region III with that of T4, switched ATPase stimulation specificity. Two specificity regions, amino acids 37-52 and 290-315, are identified in or near the gp17-ATPase "transmission" subdomain II. gp16 binding at these sites might cause a conformational change positioning the ATPase-coupling residues into the catalytic pocket, triggering ATP hydrolysis. These results lead to a model in which multiple weak interactions between motor and regulator allow dynamic assembly and disassembly of various packaging complexes, depending on the functional state of the packaging machine. This might be a general mechanism for regulation of the phage packaging machine and other complex molecular machines.  相似文献   

11.
We have used electron microscopy and small-angle X-ray diffraction to study the three principal structures found in the head assembly pathway of Salmonella phage P22. These structures are, in order of their appearance in the pathway: proheads, unstable filled heads (which lose their DNA and become empty heads upon isolation), and phage. In addition, we can convert proheads to an empty head-like form (the empty prohead) in vitro by treating them with 0.8% sodium dodecyl sulfate at room temperature.We have shown that proheads are composed of a shell of coat protein with a radius of 256 Å, containing within it a thick shell or a solid ball (outer radius 215 Å) of a second protein, the scaffolding protein, which does not appear in phage. The three other structures studied are all about 10% larger than proheads, having outer shells with radii of about 285 Å. Empty heads and empty proheads appear identical by small-angle X-ray diffraction to a resolution of 25 Å, both being shells about 40 Å thick. Phage appear to be made up of a protein shell identical to that in empty heads and empty proheads, within which is packed the DNA.Some details of the DNA packing are also revealed by the diffraction pattern of phage. The inter-helix distance is about 28 Å, and the hydration is about 1.5 g of water per g of DNA. Certain aspects of the pattern suggest that the DNA interacts in a specific mariner with the coat protein subunits on the inside edge of the protein shell.Thus, the prohead-to-head transformation involves, in addition to the loss of an internal scaffold and its replacement by DNA, a structural transition in the outer shell. Diffraction from features of the surface organization in these structures indicates that the clustering of the coat protein does not change radically during the expansion. The fact that the expansion occurs in vitro during the formation of empty proheads shows that it is due to the bonding properties of the coat protein alone, although it could be triggered in vivo by DNA -protein interactions. The significance of the structural transition is discussed in terms of its possible role in the control of head assembly and DNA packaging.  相似文献   

12.
Icosahedral double-stranded DNA viruses use a single portal for genome delivery and packaging. The extensive structural similarity revealed by such portals in diverse viruses, as well as their invariable positioning at a unique icosahedral vertex, led to the consensus that a particular, highly conserved vertex-portal architecture is essential for viral DNA translocations. Here we present an exception to this paradigm by demonstrating that genome delivery and packaging in the virus Acanthamoeba polyphaga mimivirus occur through two distinct portals. By using high-resolution techniques, including electron tomography and cryo-scanning electron microscopy, we show that Mimivirus genome delivery entails a large-scale conformational change of the capsid, whereby five icosahedral faces open up. This opening, which occurs at a unique vertex of the capsid that we coined the “stargate”, allows for the formation of a massive membrane conduit through which the viral DNA is released. A transient aperture centered at an icosahedral face distal to the DNA delivery site acts as a non-vertex DNA packaging portal. In conjunction with comparative genomic studies, our observations imply a viral packaging pathway akin to bacterial DNA segregation, which might be shared by diverse internal membrane–containing viruses.  相似文献   

13.
Icosahedral double-stranded DNA viruses use a single portal for genome delivery and packaging. The extensive structural similarity revealed by such portals in diverse viruses, as well as their invariable positioning at a unique icosahedral vertex, led to the consensus that a particular, highly conserved vertex-portal architecture is essential for viral DNA translocations. Here we present an exception to this paradigm by demonstrating that genome delivery and packaging in the virus Acanthamoeba polyphaga mimivirus occur through two distinct portals. By using high-resolution techniques, including electron tomography and cryo-scanning electron microscopy, we show that Mimivirus genome delivery entails a large-scale conformational change of the capsid, whereby five icosahedral faces open up. This opening, which occurs at a unique vertex of the capsid that we coined the “stargate”, allows for the formation of a massive membrane conduit through which the viral DNA is released. A transient aperture centered at an icosahedral face distal to the DNA delivery site acts as a non-vertex DNA packaging portal. In conjunction with comparative genomic studies, our observations imply a viral packaging pathway akin to bacterial DNA segregation, which might be shared by diverse internal membrane–containing viruses.  相似文献   

14.
A small RNA (pRNA, 174 nt) is known to be essential for DNA packaging in bacteriophage phi 29. However, in an in vitro DNA packaging system based on hybrid lambda/phi 29 proheads (made up of head proteins from phage lambda and connectors from phage phi 29), the specificity of DNA packaging is lost, and different RNA molecules fulfil the requirements for DNA packaging, albeit with less efficiency than phi 29 pRNA. Competition assays with RNAs from different sources have shown that phi 29 connectors bind preferentially pRNA. An increase in the efficiency of phi 29 DNA packaging into hybrid proheads induced by phi 29 pRNA is observed because, when phi 29 pRNA is incubated with hybrid proheads, phi 29 DNA is packaged more efficiently than other DNAs of similar length. Furthermore, when hybrid proheads carrying phi 29 pRNA are incubated with a mixture of DNAs from different sources, phi 29 DNA is selectively packaged, thus indicating that phi 29 pRNA determines the specificity of DNA packaging.  相似文献   

15.
The assembly of phage phi 29 occurs by a single pathway, and the DNA protein (DNA-gp3) of "packaging intermediates" can be obtained after DNase I interruption of in vitro complementation. A broad spectrum of DNA molecules of variable length was isolated from DNase I-treated proheads. Restriction endonuclease EcoRI digestion and electrophoretic analysis of these DNA molecules suggested that DNA-gp3 packaging was oriented with respect to the physical map and was a complex process. Proteinase K-treated exogenous DNA was not packaged. When exogenous DNA-gp3 was predigested with the restriction endonucleases BstEII. EcoRI, HpaI, and HpaII, the left-end fragments, ranging in size from 8 to 0.9 megadaltons, were selectively and efficiently packaged. During in vivo and in vitro assembly, DNA-gp3 is packaged into proheads, the "core-scaffolding" protein gp7 exits from the particles, and the DNA-filled heads assume the angular morphology of phage phi 29. The packaging of a 4.1-megadalton DNA-gp3 left-end fragment (one third of the genome) resulted in the exit of gp7 and the transition to angularity.  相似文献   

16.
The connector protein, also known as the portal protein, located at the portal vertex in the Phi29 bacteriophage has been found to play a key role in the genome DNA packaging motor. There is a disordered region, composed of 12 sets of 18-residue loops N229–N246, that has been assumed to serve as a “clamp” to retain the DNA within the pressurized capsid when DNA is fully packaged. However, the process remains undefined about how the clamping of DNA occurs and what signal is used to engage the channel loops to clamp the DNA near the end of DNA packaging. In this study, we use the planar lipid bilayer (PLB) membrane technique to study the connector with its loops cleaved. The channel properties are compared with those of the connector with corresponding wild-type loops at different membrane potentials. On the basis of the hypothesis of the Donnan effects in the flashing Brownian ratchet model, we associate the PLB experimental results with the outcomes from the relevant biochemical experiments on the proheads containing the connectors without the loops, which enables us to provide a clear picture about how the DNA clamping occurs. A mathematical relationship between the Donnan potential and the DNA packaging density is established, demonstrating that they are both in essence the same signal that is received and transmitted by the connector to dictate DNA clamping and the termination of DNA packaging. At the end of the study, the PLB technique is proposed as a viral research tool, and its potential use to study the functions of specific domains in a portal protein of the tailed bacteriophages is highlighted.  相似文献   

17.
Late in the morphogenesis of bacteriophage lambda, DNA condenses into the nascent head and is cut from a concatemeric replicative intermediate by a nucleolytic function, Ter, acting at specific sites, called cos. As a result of this process, heads of lambda deletion mutants contain less DNA than those of the wild-type phage. It has been reported that phage with very large deletions (22% of the genome or more) grow poorly but that normal growth can be restored by the non-specific addition of DNA to the genome. This finding implies that DNA content may exert a physical effect on some stage of head assembly.We have investigated the effects of two long deletions, b221 and tdel33, on head assembly. Bacteria infected with the mutants were lysed with non-ionic detergent under conditions favoring stabilization of labile structures containing condensed DNA. It has proved possible to isolate two aberrant head-related structures produced by the deletion mutants. One of these (“overfilled heads”) contains DNA which is longer than the deletion mutant genome and is about the same size as that found in wild-type heads. These structures appear to be unable to attach tails. The second type of structure (“incompletely filled heads”) contains a short piece of DNA, 40% of the length of the mutant genome. The incompletely filled heads are found both with and without attached tails. Both of these abnormal structures are initially attached to the replicating DNA but are released by treatment with DNAase. The nature of these abnormal structures indicates that very small genomes affect a late stage of head morphogenesis, after the DNA is complexed with a capsid of normal size. The results presented suggest that underfilling of the capsid interferes with the ability of the Ter function to properly cleave cos.  相似文献   

18.
Knowledge of both the packaging of the linear, double-stranded (ds)DNA in bacteriophages and its subsequent release into the bacterial host is vital to our understanding of phage infection. There is now strong evidence that packaging requires a powerful rotary motor fuelled by ATP. From thermodynamic studies, however, it has been proposed that, at least for those viruses with a contractile tail, the dsDNA ejection from the phage head is a relatively simple physical process that does not require cellular energy and is facilitated by the difference in the conditions of the medium in the environments inside and outside the head. In this case, there should be no enthalpic effects associated with the dehiscence of the capsid and no destruction of it or the other structural elements of the phage. For the present study of temperature-induced phage dehiscence, we used a newly discovered phage with a contractile tail, named the Un (unknown) bacteriophage. Evidence is given of its characteristics in terms of ultrastructural morphology, serological parameters, host range and interaction with host cell. These show that, although it has similarities with the T-even phages and, in particular, the DDVI phage, it appears to be a new type. Earlier viscometric studies with it had shown that the temperature-induced release of the capsid dsDNA was completed at 70 degrees C. In the present investigation, a concentrated suspension of purified phage was subjected to pycnometric analysis through the temperature range of 30 to 70 degrees C. This showed that a significant and abrupt increase in the phage partial volume takes place, which remarkably is in the order of threefold. Viscometric measurements over time at 72 degrees C gave a kinetic curve from which evidence it was suggested that the temperature-induced DNA release is similar to a second order phase transition. At the same time, data from differential scanning calorimetry over the same temperature range showed no enthalpic effect. Our results indicate that the ejection of DNA from the capsid tail is driven by an entropy change.  相似文献   

19.
Model for DNA packaging into bacteriophage T4 heads.   总被引:7,自引:7,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
The mechanism of DNA packaging into bacteriophage T4 heads in vivo was investigated by glucosylation of hydroxymethylcytosine residues in a conditionally glucose-deficient host. Cytoplasmic DNA associated with partially packaged ts49 heads can be fully glucosylated, whereas DNA already packaged into these heads is shown to be resistant to glucosylation. After temperature shift and completion of arrested packaging into the reversible temperature-sensitive ts49 head, the structure of the DNA in the mature ts49 phage was investigated by restriction enzyme digestion, autoradiography, and other techniques. Such mature DNA appears to be fully glucosylated along part of its length and nonglucosylated on the remainder. Its structure suggests that the DNA is run into the head linearly and unidirectionally from one mature end and that there is little sequence specificity in that portion of the T4 DNA which first enters the capsid. This technique should be useful in investigation of the three-dimensional structure of first- and last-packaged DNA within the head; preliminary studies including autoradiography of osmotically shocked phage suggest that the DNA which first enters the head is deposited toward the center of the capsid and that the end of the DNA which first enters the head exits first upon injection. In conjunction with studies of the structure of condensed DNA, the positions and functions of T4 capsid proteins in DNA packaging, and the order of T4 packaging functions [Earnshaw and Harrison, Nature (London) 268:598-602, 1977; Hsiao and Black, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 74:3652-3656, 1977; Müller-Salamin et al., J. Virol. 24:121-134, 1977; Richards et al., J. Mol. Biol. 78:255-259, 1973], the features described above suggest the following model: the first DNA end is fixed to the proximal apex of the head at p20 and the DNA is then pumped into the head enzymatically by proteins (p20 + p17) which induce torsion in the DNA molecule.  相似文献   

20.
Bacteriophage with double-stranded, linear DNA genomes package DNA into pre-assembled icosahedral procapsids through a unique vertex. The packaging vertex contains an oligomeric ring of a portal protein that serves as a recognition site for the packaging enzymes, a conduit for DNA translocation, and the site of tail attachment. Previous studies have suggested that the portal protein of bacteriophage P22 is not essential for shell assembly; however, when assembled in the absence of functional portal protein, the assembled heads are not active in vitro packaging assays. In terms of head assembly, this raises an interesting question: how are portal vertices defined during morphogenesis if their incorporation is not a requirement for head assembly? To address this, the P22 portal gene was cloned into an inducible expression vector and transformed into the P22 host Salmonella typhimurium to allow control of the dosage of portal protein during infections. Using pulse-chase radiolabeling, it was determined that the portal protein is recruited into virion during head assembly. Surprisingly, over-expression of the portal protein during wild-type P22 infection caused a dramatic reduction in the yield of infectious virus. The cause of this reduction was traced to two potentially related phenomena. First, excess portal protein caused aberrant head assembly resulting in the formation of T=7 procapsid-like particles (PLPs) with twice the normal amount of portal protein. Second, maturation of the PLPs was blocked during DNA packaging resulting in the accumulation of empty PLPs within the host. In addition to PLPs with normal morphology, smaller heads (apparently T=4) and aberrant spirals were also produced. Interestingly, maturation of the small heads was relatively efficient resulting in the formation of small mature particles that were tailed and contained a head full of DNA. These data suggest that incorporation of portal vertices into heads occurs during growth of the coat lattice at decision points that dictate head assembly fidelity.  相似文献   

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