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1.
BACKGROUND: The T4 bacteriophage consists of a head, filled with double-stranded DNA, and a complex contractile tail required for the ejection of the viral genome into the Escherichia coli host. The tail has a baseplate to wh?ch are attached six long and six short tail fibers. These fibers are the sensing devices for recognizing the host. When activated by attachment to cell receptors, the fibers cause a conformational transition in the baseplate and subsequently in the tail sheath, which initiates DNA ejection. The baseplate is a multisubunit complex of proteins encoded by 15 genes. Gene product 9 (gp9) is the protein that connects the long tail fibers to the baseplate and triggers the tail contraction after virus attachment to a host cell. RESULTS: The crystal structure of recombinant gp9, determined to 2.3 A resolution, shows that the protein of 288 amino acid residues assembles as a homotrimer. The monomer consists of three domains: the N-terminal domain generates a triple coiled coil; the middle domain is a mixed, seven-stranded beta sandwich with a topology not previously observed; and the C-terminal domain is an eight-stranded, antiparallel beta sandwich having some resemblance to 'jelly-roll' viral capsid protein structures. CONCLUSIONS: The biologically active form of gp9 is a trimer. The protein contains flexible interdomain hinges, which are presumably required to facilitate signal transmission between the long tail fibers and the baseplate. Structural and genetic analyses show that the C-terminal domain is bound to the baseplate, and the N-terminal coiled-coil domain is associated with the long tail fibers.  相似文献   

2.
Many bacteriophages, such as T4, T7, RB49, and phi29, have complex, sometimes multilayered, tails that facilitate an almost 100% success rate for the viral particles to infect host cells. In bacteriophage T4, there is a baseplate, which is a multiprotein assembly, at the distal end of the contractile tail. The baseplate communicates to the tail that the phage fibers have attached to the host cell, thereby initiating the infection process. Gene product 8 (gp8), whose amino acid sequence consists of 334 residues, is one of at least 16 different structural proteins that constitute the T4 baseplate and is the sixth baseplate protein whose structure has been determined. A 2.0A resolution X-ray structure of gp8 shows that the two-domain protein forms a dimer, in which each monomer consists of a three-layered beta-sandwich with two loops, each containing an alpha-helix at the opposite sides of the sandwich. The crystals of gp8 were produced in the presence of concentrated chloride and bromide ions, resulting in at least 11 halide-binding sites per monomer. Five halide sites, situated at the N termini of alpha-helices, have a protein environment observed in other halide-containing protein crystal structures. The computer programs EMfit and SITUS were used to determine the positions of six gp8 dimers within the 12A resolution cryo-electron microscopy image reconstruction of the baseplate-tail tube complex. The gp8 dimers were found to be located in the upper part of the baseplate outer rim. About 20% of the gp8 surface is involved in contacts with other baseplate proteins, presumed to be gp6, gp7, and gp10. With the structure determination of gp8, a total of 53% of the volume of the baseplate has now been interpreted in terms of its atomic structure.  相似文献   

3.
Bacteriophage Mu is a double-stranded DNA phage that consists of an icosahedral head, a contractile tail with baseplate and six tail fibers, similar to the well-studied T-even phages. The baseplate of bacteriophage Mu, which recognizes and attaches to a host cell during infection, consists of at least eight different proteins. The baseplate protein, gp44, is essential for bacteriophage Mu assembly and the generation of viable phages. To investigate the role of gp44 in baseplate assembly and infection, the crystal structure of gp44 was determined at 2.1A resolution by the multiple isomorphous replacement method. The overall structure of the gp44 trimer is similar to that of the T4 phage gp27 trimer, which forms the central hub of the T4 baseplate, although these proteins share very little primary sequence homology. Based on these data, we confirm that gp44 exists as a trimer exhibiting a hub-like structure with an inner diameter of 25A through which DNA can presumably pass during infection. The molecular surface of the gp44 trimer that abuts the host cell membrane is positively charged, and it is likely that Mu phage interacts with the membrane through electrostatic interactions mediated by gp44.  相似文献   

4.
The tail of bacteriophage T4 consists of a contractile sheath surrounding a rigid tube and terminating in a multiprotein baseplate, to which the long and short tail fibers of the phage are attached. Upon binding of the fibers to their cell receptors, the baseplate undergoes a large conformational switch, which initiates sheath contraction and culminates in transfer of the phage DNA from the capsid into the host cell through the tail tube. The baseplate has a dome-shaped sixfold-symmetric structure, which is stabilized by a garland of six short tail fibers, running around the periphery of the dome. In the center of the dome, there is a membrane-puncturing device, containing three lysozyme domains, which disrupts the intermembrane peptidoglycan layer during infection.  相似文献   

5.
The baseplate of bacteriophage T4 is a multiprotein molecular machine that controls host cell recognition, attachment, tail sheath contraction and viral DNA ejection. We report here the three-dimensional structure of the baseplate-tail tube complex determined to a resolution of 12 A by cryoelectron microscopy. The baseplate has a six-fold symmetric, dome-like structure approximately 520 A in diameter and approximately 270 A long, assembled around a central hub. A 940 A-long and 96 A-diameter tail tube, coaxial with the hub, is connected to the top of the baseplate. At the center of the dome is a needle-like structure that was previously identified as a cell puncturing device. We have identified the locations of six proteins with known atomic structures, and established the position and shape of several other baseplate proteins. The baseplate structure suggests a mechanism of baseplate triggering and structural transition during the initial stages of T4 infection.  相似文献   

6.
The tail of bacteriophage T4 undergoes large structural changes upon infection while delivering the phage genome into the host cell. The baseplate is located at the distal end of the contractile tail and plays a central role in transmitting the signal to the tail sheath that the tailfibers have been adsorbed by a host bacterium. This then triggers the sheath contraction. In order to understand the mechanism of assembly and conformational changes of the baseplate upon infection, we have determined the structure of an in vitro assembled baseplate through the three-dimensional reconstruction of cryo-electron microscopy images to a resolution of 3.8 Å from electron micrographs. The atomic structure was fitted to the baseplate structure before and after sheath contraction in order to elucidate the conformational changes that occur after bacteriophage T4 has attached itself to a cell surface. The structure was also used to investigate the protease digestion of the assembly intermediates and the mutation sites of the tail genes, resulting in a number of phenotypes.  相似文献   

7.
Bacteriophage T4 and related viruses have a contractile tail that serves as an efficient mechanical device for infecting bacteria. A three-dimensional cryo-EM reconstruction of the mature T4 tail assembly at 15-A resolution shows the hexagonal dome-shaped baseplate, the extended contractile sheath, the long tail fibers attached to the baseplate and the collar formed by six whiskers that interact with the long tail fibers. Comparison with the structure of the contracted tail shows that tail contraction is associated with a substantial rearrangement of the domains within the sheath protein and results in shortening of the sheath to about one-third of its original length. During contraction, the tail tube extends beneath the baseplate by about one-half of its total length and rotates by 345 degrees , allowing it to cross the host's periplasmic space.  相似文献   

8.
The T4D bacteriophage gene 28 product is a component of the central plug of the tail baseplate, as shown by the following two independent lines of evidence. (i) A highly sensitive method for radioactive labeling of only tail baseplate plug components was developed. These labeled plug components were incorporated by a complementation procedure into new phage particles and were analyzed by radioautography after sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Three new structural proteins were found in addition to the three known tail plug proteins (i.e., gP29, gP27, and gP5). One of the three newly identified components had a molecular weight of 24,000 to 25,000 and appeared to be a product of T4D gene 28. (ii) Characterization of mutants of Escherichia coli bacteriophage T4D which produced altered gene 28 products also indicated that the gene 28 product was a viral tail component. T4D 28ts phage particles produced at the permissive temperature had altered heat labilities compared with parent T4D particles. We isolated a single-step temperature revertant of T4D 28ts and found that it produced phage particles which phenotypically resembled the original T4D particles. Since the properties of the phage baseplate components usually determine heat lability, these two changes in physical stability after two sequential single mutations in gene 28 supported the other evidence that the gene 28 product was a viral baseplate component. Also, compared with parent T4D particles, T4D 28ts and T4D 28am viral particles adsorbed at different rates to various types of host cells. In addition, T4D 28ts particles exhibited a different host range than parent T4D particles. This T4D mutant formed plaques with an extremely low efficiency on all E. coli K-12 strains tested. We found that although T4D 28ts particles adsorbed rapidly and irreversibly to the E. coli K-12 strains, as judged by gene rescue experiments, these particles were not able to inject their DNA into the E. coli K-12 strains. On the other hand, the T4D 28ts revertant had a plating efficiency on E. coli K-12 strains that was quite similar to the plating efficiency of the original parent, T4D. These properties of phage particles containing an altered gene 28 product supported the analytical finding that the gene 28 product is a structural component of the central plug of the T4D tail baseplate. They also indicated that this component plays a role in both host cell recognition and viral DNA injection.  相似文献   

9.
The effect of the attachment of long tail fibers on the structure of proteins of the bacteriophage T4 baseplate was studied by digital processing of electron microscopic images. The attachment of the long fibers was found to result in dramatical changes of the proteins of the baseplate plag, while the wedges, to which the long fibers are attached, undergo only slight changes. We studied the baseplates with one to six attached fibers and found that the attachment of one fiber resulted in the change of the entire baseplate, although the wedge located in the vicinity of the fiber attachment changed to a greater extent. Only after the attachment of three and more fibers the changes of the same kind occurred through the entire baseplate.  相似文献   

10.
A phage-neutralizing rabbit antiserum collected after immunization with tail-fiberless bacteriophage T4 particles was adsorbed with complete T4 phage. The resulting adsorbed serum inhibited tail fiber attachment in vitro. To identify the antigens against which this inhibitory activity was directed, blocking experiments were carried out with the adsorbed serum. Isolated complete baseplates and mutant-infected-cell extracts lacking known baseplate gene products but containing gene 9 product showed similar high levels of blocking activity. By contrast, both tail-fiberless particles lacking gene 9 product and infected-cell extracts made with gene 9 mutants showed 30-fold to 100-fold lower blocking activity. These results strongly support the conclusion that gene 9 product is the baseplate protein to which tail fibers attach.  相似文献   

11.
L M Kozloff  M Lute    L K Crosby 《Journal of virology》1975,16(6):1391-1400
Two different proteins with high affinities for the pteridine ring of folic acid have been used to determine the location of this portion of the folate molecule in the tail plate of T4D and other T-even bacteriophage particles. The two proteins used were (i) antibody specific for folic acid and (ii) the folate-binding protein from bovine milk. Both proteins were examined for their effect on various intact and incomplete phage particles. Intact T2H was weakly inactivated by the antiserum but not by the milk protein. No other intact T-even phage, including T4D, was affected by these two proteins. When incomplete T4D particles were exposed in an in vitro morphogenesis system, it was found that neither of the two proteins affected either the addition of the long tail fibers to fiberless particles or the addition of tail cores to tail plates. On the other hand, these two proteins specifically blocked the addition of T4D gene 11 product to the bottom of T4D baseplates. After the addition of the gene 11 protein, these two reagents did not inhibit the further addition of the gene 12 protein to the baseplate. It can be concluded that the phage folic acid is a tightly bound baseplate constituent and that the pteridine portion of the folic acid is largely covered by the gene 11 protein.  相似文献   

12.
Products of two bacteriophage T4D genes, 26 and 51, both known to be essential for the formation of the central hub of the phage tail baseplate, have been partially characterized chemically, and their biological role has been examined. The gene 26 product was found to be a protein with a molecular size of 41,000 daltons and the gene 51 product a protein of 16,500 daltons. The earlier proposal (L. M. Kozloff and J. Zorzopulos, J. Virol. 40:635-644), from observations of a 40,000-dalton protein in labeled hubs, that the gene 26 product is a structural component of the baseplate, has been confirmed. The gene 51 product, not yet detected in phage particles, appears from indirect evidence also to be a structural component of the baseplate hub. These current conclusions about the gene 26 and 51 products are based on properties of T4 mutant particles containing altered gene 26 or 51 products and include (i) changes in heat lability, (ii) changes in adsorption rates, and (iii) changes in plating efficiencies on different hosts, and with the results of previous isotope incorporation experiments indicate that T4 particles contain three copies of the gene 26 product and possibly one or at most two copies of the gene 51 product. Properties of these mutant particles indicate that the gene 26 product, together with the other hub components such as the gene 28 product, plays a critical role in phage DNA injection into the host cell, whereas the 51 product seems essential in initiating baseplate hub assembly.  相似文献   

13.
The contractile tail of bacteriophage T4 undergoes major structural transitions when the virus attaches to the host cell surface. The baseplate at the distal end of the tail changes from a hexagonal to a star shape. This causes the sheath around the tail tube to contract and the tail tube to protrude from the baseplate and pierce the outer cell membrane and the cell wall before reaching the inner cell membrane for subsequent viral DNA injection. Analogously, the T4 tail can be contracted by treatment with 3 M urea. The structure of the T4 contracted tail, including the head-tail joining region, has been determined by cryo-electron microscopy to 17 A resolution. This 1200 A-long, 20 MDa structure has been interpreted in terms of multiple copies of its approximately 20 component proteins. A comparison with the metastable hexagonal baseplate of the mature virus shows that the baseplate proteins move as rigid bodies relative to each other during the structural change.  相似文献   

14.
Remarkable progress has been made during the past ten years in elucidating the structure of the bacteriophage T4 tail by a combination of three-dimensional image reconstruction from electron micrographs and X-ray crystallography of the components. Partial and complete structures of nine out of twenty tail structural proteins have been determined by X-ray crystallography and have been fitted into the 3D-reconstituted structure of the "extended" tail. The 3D structure of the "contracted" tail was also determined and interpreted in terms of component proteins. Given the pseudo-atomic tail structures both before and after contraction, it is now possible to understand the gross conformational change of the baseplate in terms of the change in the relative positions of the subunit proteins. These studies have explained how the conformational change of the baseplate and contraction of the tail are related to the tail's host cell recognition and membrane penetration function. On the other hand, the baseplate assembly process has been recently reexamined in detail in a precise system involving recombinant proteins (unlike the earlier studies with phage mutants). These experiments showed that the sequential association of the subunits of the baseplate wedge is based on the induced-fit upon association of each subunit. It was also found that, upon association of gp53 (gene product 53), the penultimate subunit of the wedge, six of the wedge intermediates spontaneously associate to form a baseplate-like structure in the absence of the central hub. Structure determination of the rest of the subunits and intermediate complexes and the assembly of the hub still require further study.  相似文献   

15.
The tail structures of bacteriophages infecting gram-positive bacteria are largely unexplored, although the phage tail mediates the initial interaction with the host cell. The temperate Lactococcus lactis phage TP901-1 of the Siphoviridae family has a long noncontractile tail with a distal baseplate. In the present study, we investigated the distal tail structures and tail assembly of phage TP901-1 by introducing nonsense mutations into the late transcribed genes dit (orf46), tal(TP901-1) (orf47), bppU (orf48), bppL (orf49), and orf50. Transmission electron microscopy examination of mutant and wild-type TP901-1 phages showed that the baseplate consisted of two different disks and that a central tail fiber is protruding below the baseplate. Evaluation of the mutant tail morphologies with protein profiles and Western blots revealed that the upper and lower baseplate disks consist of the proteins BppU and BppL, respectively. Likewise, Dit and Tal(TP901-1) were shown to be structural tail proteins essential for tail formation, and Tal(TP901-1) was furthermore identified as the tail fiber protein by immunogold labeling experiments. Determination of infection efficiencies of the mutant phages showed that the baseplate is fundamental for host infection and the lower disk protein, BppL, is suggested to interact with the host receptor. In contrast, ORF50 was found to be nonessential for tail assembly and host infection. A model for TP901-1 tail assembly, in which the function of eight specific proteins is considered, is presented.  相似文献   

16.
The adsorbability of T4 on host cells was determined as a function of time after their liberation from infected cells. Freshly liberated (nascent) particles are readily adsorbed but lose their adsorbability with a half-time of about 2 days at 5 C, but only about 20 min at 37 C. They can be made adsorbable again with an alpha-amino acid cofactor like l-tryptophan, and this state of adsorbability can be stabilized by cell wall material from Escherichia coli. Such stabilized particles lose their adsorbability at a rate similar to that at which nascent particles lose theirs. Most freshly liberated particles are observed by means of electron microscopy to have "debris" attached to their baseplates and to have most of their six, long tail fibers free, whereas "old" particles that have lost their adsorbability appear relatively "clean" with most of their tail fibers wrapped around their sheaths. Nascent particles have densities that are lower than those of old particles. The material responsible for nascent adsorbability seems to be a fragment of the host's cell wall, for nascent adsorbability is destroyed by lysozyme. Furthermore, nascent T4 particles liberated from host cells with radioactively labeled walls carry the label in density gradients but lose it as they lose adsorbability. In addition, only a small proportion of particles liberated from infected spheroplasts are nascently adsorbable, whereas most particles liberated from intact cells are adsorbable.  相似文献   

17.
The prolate icosahedral capsid geometry of wild type bacteriophage T4D has been determined by direct visualization of the triangular faces in stereoimages of transmission electron micrographs of phage particles. Bacteriophage T4 was prepared for transmission electron microscopy (TEM) following a protocol of freeze-fracturing, deep-etching (FDET) and replication by vertical deposition (80 degrees angle) of a thin platinum-carbon (Pt-C) metal layer of 1.01 nm. From direct statistical measurements of the ratio of the head length to width and of stereometric angles on T4 heads, we have estimated a Q number of 21. This confirms previous indirect studies on T4 and agrees with determinations on bacteriophage T2. Many of the structural features of T4 observed in FDET preparations differ significantly from those observed by classical negative staining methods for TEM imaging. Most important among the differences are the conformation of the baseplate (a closed rosebud) and the positioning of the tail fibers (retracted). The retracted position of the tail fibers in the FDET preparations has been confirmed by negatively staining phage previously fixed suspended in solution with 2% glutaraldehyde. The FDET protocols appear to reveal important structural features not seen in negative stained preparations. These have implications for bacteriophage T4 conformation in solution, viral assembly and phage conformation states prior to tail contraction and DNA ejection.  相似文献   

18.
The success of tailed bacteriophages to infect cells far exceeds that of most other viruses on account of their specialized tail and associated baseplate structures. The baseplate protein gene product (gp) 10 of bacteriophage T4, whose structure was determined to 1.2 A resolution, was fitted into the cryo-electron microscopy structures of the pre and post-infection conformations of the virus. gp10 functions as a molecular lever that rotates and extends the hinged short tail fibers to facilitate cell attachment. The central folding motif of the gp10 trimer is similar to that of the baseplate protein gp11 and to the receptor-binding domain of the short tail fiber, gp12. The three proteins comprise the periphery of the baseplate and interact with each other. The structural and functional similarities of gp10, gp11, and gp12 and their sequential order in the T4 genome suggest that they evolved separately, subsequent to gene triplication from a common ancestor. Such events are usual in the evolution of complex organelles from a common primordial molecule.  相似文献   

19.
Bacteriophages belonging to the Caudovirales order possess a tail acting as a molecular machine used during infection to recognize the host and ensure high-efficiency genome delivery to the cell cytoplasm. They bear a large and sophisticated multiprotein organelle at their distal tail end, either a baseplate or a tail-tip, which is the control center for infectivity. We report here insights into the baseplate assembly pathways of two lactoccocal phages (p2 and TP901-1) using electrospray ionization-mass spectrometry. Based on our "block cloning" strategy we have expressed large complexes of their baseplates as well as several significant structural subcomplexes. Previous biophysical characterization using size-exclusion chromatography coupled with on-line light scattering and refractometry demonstrated that the overproduced recombinant proteins interact with each other to form large (up to 1.9 MDa) and stable assemblies. The structures of several of these complexes have been determined by x-ray diffraction or by electron microscopy. In this contribution, we demonstrate that electrospray ionization-mass spectrometry yields accurate mass measurements for the different baseplate complexes studied from which their stoichiometries can be discerned, and that the subspecies observed in the spectra provide valuable information on the assembly mechanisms of these large organelles.  相似文献   

20.
Abstract

The prolate icosahedral capsid geometry of wild type bacteriophage T4D has been determined by direct visualization of the triangular faces in stereoimages of transmission electron micrographs of phage particles. Bacteriophage T4 was prepared for transmission electron microscopy (TEM) following a protocol of freeze-fracturing, deep-etching (FDET) and replication by vertical deposition (80° angle) of a thin platinum-carbon (Pt-C) metal layer of 1.01 nm. From direct statistical measurements of the ratio of the head length to width and of stereometric angles on T4 heads, we have estimated a Q number of 21. This confirms previous indirect studies on T4 and agrees with determinations on bacteriophage T2. Many of the structural features of T4 observed in FDET preparations differ significantly from those observed by classical negative staining methods for TEM imaging. Most important among the differences are the conformation of the baseplate (a closed rosebud) and the positioning of the tail fibers (retracted). The retracted position of the tail fibers in the FDET preparations has been confirmed by negatively staining phage previously fixed suspended in solution with 2% glutaraldehyde. The FDET protocols appear to reveal important structural features not seen in negative stained preparations. These have implications for bacteriophage T4 conformation in solution, viral assembly and phage conformation states prior to tail contraction and DNA ejection.  相似文献   

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