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The lambda spanin components Rz and Rz1 undergo tertiary and quaternary rearrangements upon complex formation
Authors:Joel Berry  Christos Savva  Andreas Holzenburg  Ry Young
Institution:1Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, 2128 TAMU, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas 77843-2128;2Microscopy and Imaging Center, Department of Biology, Texas A&M University, 2257 TAMU, College Station, Texas 77843
Abstract:Phage holins and endolysins have long been known to play key roles in lysis of the host cell, disrupting the cytoplasmic membrane and peptidoglycan (PG) layer, respectively. For phages of Gram‐negative hosts, a third class of proteins, the spanins, are involved in disrupting the outer membrane (OM). Rz and Rz1, the components of the lambda spanin, are, respectively, a class II inner membrane protein and an OM lipoprotein, are thought to span the entire periplasm by virtue of C‐terminal interactions of their soluble domains. Here, the periplasmic domains of Rz and Rz1 have been purified and shown to form dimeric and monomeric species, respectively, in solution. Circular dichroism analysis indicates that Rz has significant alpha‐helical character, but much less than predicted, whereas Rz1, which is 25% proline, is unstructured. Mixture of the two proteins leads to complex formation and an increase in secondary structure, especially alpha‐helical content. Moreover, transmission electron‐microscopy reveals that Rz–Rz1 complexes form large rod‐shaped structures which, although heterogeneous, exhibit periodicities that may reflect coiled‐coil bundling as well as a long dimension that matches the width of the periplasm. A model is proposed suggesting that the formation of such bundles depends on the removal of the PG and underlies the Rz–Rz1 dependent disruption of the OM.
Keywords:lysis  coiled‐coil  two‐component spanins  endolysin
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