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1.
Coat and scaffolding subunits derived from P22 procapsids have been purified in forms that co-assemble rapidly and efficiently into icosahedral shells in vitro under native conditions. The half-time for this reaction is approximately five minutes at 21 degrees C. The in vitro reaction exhibits the regulated features observed in vivo. Neither coat nor scaffolding subunits alone self-assemble into large structures. Upon mixing the subunits together they polymerize into procapsid-like shells with the in vivo coat and scaffolding protein composition. The subunits in the purified coat protein preparations are monomeric. The scaffolding subunits appear to be monomeric or dimeric. These results confirm that P22 procapsid formation does not proceed through the assembly of a core of scaffolding, which then organizes the coat, but requires copolymerization of coat and scaffolding. To explore the mechanisms of the control of polymerization, shell assembly was examined as a function of the input ratio of scaffolding to coat subunits. The results indicated that scaffolding protein was required for both initiation of shell assembly and continued polymerization. Though procapsids produced in vivo contain about 300 molecules of scaffolding, shells with fewer subunits could be assembled down to a lower limit of about 140 scaffolding subunits per shell. The overall results of these experiments indicate that coat and scaffolding subunits must interact in both the initiation and the growth phases of shell assembly. However, it remains unclear whether during growth the coat and scaffolding subunits form a mixed oligomer prior to adding to the shell or whether this occurs at the growing edge.  相似文献   

2.
Assembly of bacteriophage P22 procapsids has long served as a model for assembly of spherical viruses. Historically, assembly of viruses has been viewed as a non-equilibrium process. Recently alternative models have been developed that treat spherical virus assembly as an equilibrium process. Here we have investigated whether P22 procapsid assembly reactions achieve equilibrium or are irreversibly trapped. To assemble a procapsid-like particle in vitro, pure coat protein monomers are mixed with scaffolding protein. We show that free subunits can exchange with assembled structures, indicating that assembly is a reversible, equilibrium process. When empty procapsid shells (procapsids with the scaffolding protein stripped out) were diluted so that the concentration was below the dissociation constant ( approximately 5 microM) for coat protein monomers, free monomers were detected. The released monomers were assembly-competent; when NaCl was added to metastable partial capsids that were aged for an extended period, the released coat subunits were able to rapidly re-distribute from the partial capsids and form whole procapsids. Lastly, radioactive monomeric coat subunits were able to exchange with the subunits from empty procapsid shells. The data presented illustrate that coat protein monomers are able to dissociate from procapsids in an active state, that assembly of procapsids is consistent with reactions at equilibrium and that the reaction follows the law of mass action.  相似文献   

3.
P E Prevelige  Jr  D Thomas    J King 《Biophysical journal》1993,64(3):824-835
The polymerization of protein subunits into precursor shells empty of DNA is a critical process in the assembly of double-stranded DNA viruses. For the well-characterized icosahedral procapsid of phage P22, coat and scaffolding protein subunits do not assemble separately but, upon mixing, copolymerize into double-shelled procapsids in vitro. The polymerization reaction displays the characteristics of a nucleation limited reaction: a paucity of intermediate assembly states, a critical concentration, and kinetics displaying a lag phase. Partially formed shell intermediates were directly visualized during the growth phase by electron microscopy of the reaction mixture. The morphology of these intermediates suggests that assembly is a highly directed process. The initial rate of this reaction depends on the fifth power of the coat subunit concentration and the second or third power of the scaffolding concentration, suggesting that pentamer of coat protein and dimers or trimers of scaffolding protein, respectively, participate in the rate-limiting step.  相似文献   

4.
J Lanman  R Tuma  P E Prevelige 《Biochemistry》1999,38(44):14614-14623
The bacteriophage P22 serves as a model for assembly of icosahedral dsDNA viruses. The P22 procapsid, which constitutes the precursor for DNA packaging, is built from 420 copies of a single coat protein with the aid of stoichiometric amounts of scaffolding protein. Upon DNA entry, the procapsid shell expands and matures into a stable virion. It was proposed that expansion is mediated by hinge bending and domain movement. We have used limited proteolysis to map the dynamic stability of the coat protein domain structures. The coat protein monomer is susceptible to proteolytic digestion, but limited proteolysis by small quantities of elastase or chymotrypsin yielded two metastable fragments (domains). The N-terminal domain (residues 1-180) is linked to the C-terminal domain (residues 205-429) by a protease-susceptible loop (residues 180-205). The two domains remain associated after the loop cleavage. Although only a small change of secondary structure results from the loop cleavage, both tertiary interdomain contacts and subunit thermostability are diminished. The intact loop is also required for assembly of the monomeric coat protein into procapsids. Upon assembly, coat protein becomes largely protease-resistant, baring cleavage within the loop region of about half of the subunits. Loop cleavage decreases the stability of the procapsids and facilitates heat-induced shell expansion. Upon expansion, the loop becomes protease-resistant. Our data suggest the loop region becomes more ordered during assembly and maturation and thereby plays an important role in both of these stages.  相似文献   

5.
P22 serves as a model for the assembly and maturation of icosahedral double-stranded DNA viruses. The viral capsid precursor, or procapsid, is assembled from 420 copies of a 47 kDa coat protein subunit (gp5) that is rich in beta-strand secondary structure. Maturation to the capsid, which occurs in vivo upon DNA packaging, is accompanied by shell expansion and a large increase in the level of protection against deuterium exchange of amide NH groups. Accordingly, shell maturation resembles the final step in protein folding, wherein domain packing and an exchange-protected core become more fully developed [Tuma, R., Prevelige, P. E., Jr., and Thomas, G. J., Jr. (1998) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 95, 9885-9890]. Here, we exploit recent advances in Raman spectroscopy to investigate the P22 coat protein subunit under conditions which stabilize the monomeric state, viz., in solution at very low concentrations. Under these conditions, the monomer exhibits an elongated shape, as demonstrated by small-angle X-ray scattering. Raman spectra allow the identification of conformation-sensitive marker bands of the monomer, as well as the characterization of NH exchange dynamics for comparison with procapsid and capsid shell assemblies. We show that procapsid assembly involves significant ordering of the predominantly beta-strand backbone. We propose that such ordering may mediate formation of the distinct subunit conformations required for assembly of a T = 7 icosahedral lattice. However, the monomer, like the subunit within the procapsid lattice, exhibits a moderate level of protection against low-temperature NH exchange, indicative of a nascent folding core. The environments and exchange characteristics of key side chains are also similar for the monomeric and procapsid subunits, and distinct from corresponding characteristics of the capsid subunit. The monomer thus represents a compact but metastable folding intermediate along the pathway to assembly of the procapsid and capsid.  相似文献   

6.
The scaffolding proteins of double-stranded DNA viruses are required for the polymerization of capsid subunits into properly sized closed shells but are absent from the mature virions. Phage P22 scaffolding subunits are elongated 33-kDa molecules that copolymerize with coat subunits into icosahedral precursor shells and subsequently exit from the precursor shell through channels in the procapsid lattice to participate in further rounds of polymerization and dissociation. Purified scaffolding subunits could be refolded in vitro after denaturation by high temperature or guanidine hydrochloride solutions. The lack of coincidence of fluorescence and circular dichroism signals indicated the presence of at least one partially folded intermediate, suggesting that the protein consisted of multiple domains. Proteolytic fragments containing the C terminus were competent for copolymerization with capsid subunits into procapsid shells in vitro, whereas the N terminus was not needed for this function. Proteolysis of partially denatured scaffolding subunits indicated that it was the capsid-binding C-terminal domain that unfolded at low temperatures and guanidinium concentrations. The minimal stability of the coat-binding domain may reflect its role in the conformational switching needed for icosahedral shell assembly.  相似文献   

7.
Viral capsids are dynamic structures which undergo a series of structural transformations to form infectious viruses. The dsDNA bacteriophage P22 is used as a model system to study the assembly and maturation of icosahedral dsDNA viruses. The P22 procapsid, which is the viral capsid precursor, is assembled from coat protein with the aid of scaffolding protein. Upon DNA packaging, the capsid lattice expands and becomes a stable virion. Limited proteolysis and biochemical experiments indicated that the coat protein consists of two domains connected by a flexible loop. To investigate the properties and roles of the sub-domains, we have cloned them and initiated structure and function studies. The N-terminal domain, which is made up of 190 amino acid residues, is largely unstructured in solution, while the C-terminal domain, which consists of 239 amino acid residues, forms a stable non-covalent dimer. The N-terminal domain adopts additional structure in the context of the C-terminal domain which might form a platform on which the N-terminal domain can fold. The local dynamics of the coat protein in both procapsids and mature capsids was monitored by hydrogen/deuterium exchange combined with mass spectrometry. The exchange rate for C-terminal domain peptides was similar in both forms. However, the N-terminal domain was more flexible in the empty procapsid shells than in the mature capsids. The flexibility of the N-terminal domain observed in the solution persisted into the procapsid form, but was lost upon maturation. The loop region connecting the two domains exchanged rapidly in the empty procapsid shells, but more slowly in the mature capsids. The global stabilization of the N-terminal domain and the flexibility encoded in the loop region may be a key component of the maturation process.  相似文献   

8.
The assembly of the precursor shells of bacteriophage P22 entails the co-polymerization of gene 5 coat protein with gene 8 scaffolding protein into double shell structures. During DNA encapsidation, the inner shell of scaffolding molecules dissociates and exits from the prohead. These molecules then recycle, catalyzing the assembly of newly synthesized coat protein to form new proheads (King and Casjens, 1974).Although gene 5 and gene 8 are adjacent on the phage chromosome, we find that the synthesis of the two proteins is differentially regulated. In productively infected cells, scaffolding protein is synthesized at a low rate relative to the coat protein. In contrast, cells that are infected with mutants blocked in DNA packaging and accumulate precursor shells synthesize scaffolding protein at a much higher rate. If a mutation is introduced into the coat protein gene, however, preventing shell assembly, the rate of scaffolding protein synthesis decreases to less than the wild-type rate.The experiments are consistent with models in which either continued synthesis of scaffolding protein depends upon co-polymerization with coat subunits, or soluble scaffolding subunits (but not assembled subunits) depress their own further synthesis. The finding that amber fragments of the scaffolding protein are synthesized at a very low rate is inconsistent with the second model. There is evidence, however, that fragments of the protein may have regulatory activity.The regulatory circuit couples scaffolding protein synthesis to morphogenesis. Gene dosage experiments show that regulation results in the maintenance of coat and scaffolding subunits in the proper ratio for shell assembly.  相似文献   

9.
Previous studies have shown that the assembly of the precursor shell (prohead) of bacteriophage P22 requires the copolymerization of the gene 5 coat protein with the gene 8 scaffolding protein. Removal of the scaffolding protein by mutation prevents efficient coat protein assembly, but some aberrant particles do form. We have now isolated these structures and characterized them with respect to morphology, protein composition, and small-angle X-ray scattering properties.The aberrant particles fall into three morphological classes, i.e. complex spirals and closed shells of two sizes. Small-angle X-ray scattering studies confirm that the larger particles are hollow shells with the radius of proheads (r = 260 A?), and not of the mature virus (r = 285 A?). These structures lack the inner shell of scaffolding protein found in proheads. The small particles have a radius of 195 Å, smaller than proheads, and appear to contain material, not scaffolding protein, within the outer shell.The aberrant particles contain two minor protein species, the gene 9 tail-spike protein, and an unidentified 67,000 molecular weight polypeptide, probably from the host. Neither is found in normal proheads. Removal of gene.9 product by mutation did not affect the formation of the aggregates. Fractionation of the morphological classes of particles revealed that the 67,000 molecular weight band was associated with the closed shells. It may be serving as a pseudo-initiator.Earlier studies had shown that treatment of proheads with sodium dodecyl sulfate in vitro resulted in loss of the scaffolding protein, and expansion of the shell to the mature radius of 285 Å. When the 8? prohead-sized shells were treated similarly, they also expanded to the mature-sized shell. These results support the idea that there are at least two stable states of the coat protein, one of which, the prohead form, is an obligatory precursor of the mature form.  相似文献   

10.
In the double-stranded DNA containing bacteriophages, hundreds of copies of capsid protein subunits polymerize to form icosahedral shells, called procapsids, into which the viral genome is subsequently packaged to form infectious virions. High assembly fidelity requires the assistance of scaffolding protein molecules, which interact with the capsid proteins to insure proper geometrical incorporation of subunits into the growing icosahedral lattices. The interactions between the scaffolding and capsid proteins are transient and are subsequently disrupted during DNA packaging. Removal of scaffolding protein is achieved either by proteolysis or alternatively by some form of conformational switch that allows it to dissociate from the capsid. To identify the switch controlling scaffolding protein association and release, hydrogen deuterium exchange was applied to Bacillus subtilis phage Ø29 scaffolding protein gp7 in both free and procapsid-bound forms. The H/D exchange experiments revealed highly dynamic and cooperative opening motions of scaffolding molecules in the N-terminal helix-loop-helix (H-L-H) region. The motions can be promoted by destabilizing the hydrophobic contact between two helices. At low temperature where high energy motions were damped, or in a mutant in which the helices were tethered through the introduction of a disulfide bond, this region displayed restricted cooperative opening motions as demonstrated by a switch in the exchange kinetics from correlated EX1 exchange to uncorrelated EX2 exchange. The cooperative opening rate was increased in the procapsid-bound form, suggesting this region might interact with the capsid protein. Its dynamic nature might play a role in the assembly and release mechanism.  相似文献   

11.
Assembly of certain classes of bacterial and animal viruses requires the transient presence of molecules known as scaffolding proteins, which are essential for the assembly of the precursor procapsid. To assemble a procapsid of the proper size, each viral coat subunit must adopt the correct quasiequivalent conformation from several possible choices, depending upon the T number of the capsid. In the absence of scaffolding protein, the viral coat proteins form aberrantly shaped and incorrectly sized capsids that cannot package DNA. Although scaffolding proteins do not form icosahedral cores within procapsids, an icosahedrally ordered coat/scaffolding interaction could explain how scaffolding can cause conformational differences between coat subunits. To identify the interaction sites of scaffolding protein with the bacteriophage P22 coat protein lattice, we have determined electron cryomicroscopy structures of scaffolding-containing and scaffolding-lacking procapsids. The resulting difference maps suggest specific interactions of scaffolding protein with only four of the seven quasiequivalent coat protein conformations in the T = 7 P22 procapsid lattice, supporting the idea that the conformational switching of a coat subunit is regulated by the type of interactions it undergoes with the scaffolding protein. Based on these results, we propose a model for P22 procapsid assembly that involves alternating steps in which first coat, then scaffolding subunits form self-interactions that promote the addition of the other protein. Together, the coat and scaffolding provide overlapping sets of binding interactions that drive the formation of the procapsid.  相似文献   

12.
The coat and scaffolding proteins of bacteriophage P22 procapsids have been purified in soluble form. By incubating both purified proteins with a mutant-infected cell extract lacking procapsids, but competent for DNA packaging in vitro (Poteete et al., 1979), we were able to obtain assembly of biologically active procapsids in vitro. The active species for complementation in vitro in both protein preparations copurified with the soluble subunits, indicating that these subunits represent precursors in procapsid polymerization.When the purified coat and scaffolding subunits were mixed directly, they polymerized into double-shelled procapsid-like structures during dialysis from 1.5 m-guanidine hydrochloride to buffer. When dialyzed separately under the same conditions, the scaffolding subunits did not polymerize but remained as soluble subunits, as did most of the coat subunits. No evidence was found for self-assembly of the scaffolding protein in the absence of the coat protein.The unassembled coat subunits sedimented at 3.9 S and the unassembled scaffolding subunits sedimented at 2.4 S in sucrose gradients. The Stokes' radius, determined by gel filtration, was 25 Å for the coat subunits and 34 Å for the scaffolding subunits. These results indicate that the scaffolding subunits are relatively slender elongated molecules, whereas the coat subunits are more globular.The experiments suggest that the procapsid is built by copolymerization of the two protein species. Their interaction on the growing surface of the shell structure, and not in solution, appears to regulate successive binding interactions.  相似文献   

13.
The assembly intermediates of the Salmonella bacteriophage P22 are well defined but the molecular interactions between the subunits that participate in its assembly are not. The first stable intermediate in the assembly of the P22 virion is the procapsid, a preformed protein shell into which the viral genome is packaged. The procapsid consists of an icosahedrally symmetric shell of 415 molecules of coat protein, a dodecameric ring of portal protein at one of the icosahedral vertices through which the DNA enters, and approximately 250 molecules of scaffolding protein in the interior. Scaffolding protein is required for assembly of the procapsid but is not present in the mature virion. In order to define regions of scaffolding protein that contribute to the different aspects of its function, truncation mutants of the scaffolding protein were expressed during infection with scaffolding deficient phage P22, and the products of assembly were analyzed. Scaffolding protein amino acids 1-20 are not essential, since a mutant missing them is able to fully complement scaffolding deficient phage. Mutants lacking 57 N-terminal amino acids support the assembly of DNA containing virion-like particles; however, these particles have at least three differences from wild-type virions: (i) a less than normal complement of the gene 16 protein, which is required for DNA injection from the virion, (ii) a fraction of the truncated scaffolding protein was retained within the virions, and (iii) the encapsidated DNA molecule is shorter than the wild-type genome. Procapsids assembled in the presence of a scaffolding protein mutant consisting of only the C-terminal 75 amino acids contained the portal protein, but procapsids assembled with the C-terminal 66 did not, suggesting portal recruitment function for the region about 75 amino acids from the C terminus. Finally, scaffolding protein amino acids 280 through 294 constitute its minimal coat protein binding site.  相似文献   

14.
An in vitro assembly system was developed to study prolate capsid assembly of phage ?29 biochemically, and to identify regions of scaffolding protein required for its functions. The crowding agent polyethylene glycol can induce bacteriophage ?29 monomeric capsid protein and dimeric scaffolding protein to co-assemble to form particles which have the same geometry as either prolate T=3 Q=5 procapsids formed in vivo or previously observed isometric particles. The formation of particles is a scaffolding-dependent reaction. The balance between the fidelity and efficiency of assembly is controlled by the concentration of crowding agent and temperature. The assembly process is salt sensitive, suggesting that the interactions between the scaffolding and coat proteins are electrostatic. Three N-terminal ?29 scaffolding protein deletion mutants, Delta 1-9, Delta 1-15 and Delta 1-22, abolish the assembly activity. Circular dichroism spectra indicate that these N-terminal deletions are accompanied by a loss of helicity. The inability of these proteins to dimerize suggests that the N-terminal region of the scaffolding protein contributes to the dimer interface and maintains the structural integrity of the dimeric protein. Two C-terminal scaffolding protein deletion mutants, Delta 79-97 and Delta 62-97, also fail to promote assembly. However, the secondary structure and the dimerization ability of these mutants are unchanged relative to wild-type, which suggests that the C terminus is the likely site of interaction with the capsid protein.  相似文献   

15.
Initiation of P22 procapsid assembly in vivo   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
The procapsids of all double-stranded DNA phages have a unique portal vertex, which is the locus of DNA packaging and DNA injection. Procapsid assembly is also initiated at this vertex, which is defined by the presence of a cyclic dodecamer of the portal protein. Assembly of the procapsid shell of phage P22 requires the gene 5 coat protein and the gene 8 scaffolding protein. We report here that removal of gene product (gp) 1 portal protein of P22 by mutation does not slow the rate of polymerization of coat and scaffolding subunits into shells, indicating that the portal ring is dispensable for shell initiation. Mutant scaffolding subunits specified by tsU172 copolymerize with coat subunits into procapsids at restrictive temperature, and also correctly autoregulate their synthesis. However, the shell structures formed from the temperature-sensitive scaffolding subunits fail to incorporate the portal ring and the three minor DNA injection proteins. This mutation identifies a domain of the scaffolding protein specifically involved in organization of the portal vertex. The results suggest that it is a complex of the scaffolding protein that initiates procapsid assembly and organizes the portal ring.  相似文献   

16.
Assembly of the hundreds of subunits required to form an icosahedral virus must proceed with exquisite fidelity, and is a paradigm for the self-organization of complex macromolecular structures. However, the mechanism for capsid assembly is not completely understood for any virus. Here we have investigated the in vitro assembly of phage P22 procapsids using a quantitative model specifically developed to analyze assembly of spherical viruses. Phage P22 procapsids are the product of the co-assembly of 420 molecules of coat protein and approximately 100-300 molecules of scaffolding protein. Scaffolding protein serves as an assembly chaperone and is not part of the final mature capsid, but is essential for proper procapsid assembly. Here we show that scaffolding protein also affects the thermodynamics of assembly, and for the first time this quantitative analysis has been performed on a virus composed of more than one type of protein subunit. Purified coat and scaffolding proteins were mixed in varying ratios in vitro to form procapsids. The reactions were allowed to reach equilibrium and the proportion of the input protein assembled into procapsids or remaining as free subunits was determined by size exclusion chromatography and SDS-PAGE. The results were used to calculate the free energy contributions for individual coat and scaffolding proteins. Each coat protein subunit was found to contribute -7.2(+/-0.1)kcal/mol and each scaffolding protein -6.1(+/-0.2)kcal/mol to the stability of the procapsid. Because each protein interacts with two or more neighbors, the pair-wise energies are even less. The weak protein interactions observed in the assembly of procapsids are likely important in the control of nucleation, since an increase in affinity between coat and scaffolding proteins can lead to kinetic traps caused by the formation of too many nuclei. In addition, we find that adjusting the molar ratio of scaffolding to coat protein can alter the assembly product. When the scaffolding protein concentration is low relative to coat protein, there is a correspondingly low yield of proper procapsids. When the relative concentration is very high, too many nuclei form, leading to kinetically trapped assembly intermediates.  相似文献   

17.
We have investigated determinants of polyhead formation in bacteriophage P22 in order to understand the molecular mechanism by which coat protein assembly goes astray. Polyhead assembly is caused by amino acid substitutions in coat protein at position 170, which is located in the β‐hinge. In vivo scaffolding protein does not correct polyhead assembly by F170A or F170K coat proteins, but does for F170L. All F170 variants bind scaffolding protein more weakly than wild‐type as observed by affinity chromatography with scaffolding protein‐agarose and scaffolding protein shell re‐entry experiments. Electron cryo‐microscopy and three‐dimensional image reconstructions of F170A and F170K empty procapsid shells showed that there is a decreased flexibility of the coat subunits relative to wild‐type. This was confirmed by limited proteolysis and protein sequencing, which showed increased protection of the A‐domain. Our data support the conclusion that the decrease in flexibility of the A‐domain leads to crowding of the subunits at the centre of the pentons, thereby favouring the hexon configuration during assembly. Thus, correct coat protein interactions with scaffolding protein and maintenance of sufficient coat protein flexibility are crucial for proper P22 assembly. The coat protein β‐hinge region is the major determinant for both features.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
Procapsid assembly is a process whereby hundreds of copies of a major capsid protein assemble into an icosahedral protein shell into which the viral genome is packaged. The essential features of procapsid assembly are conserved in both eukaryotic and prokaryotic complex double-stranded DNA viruses. Typically, a portal protein nucleates the co-polymerization of an internal scaffolding protein and the major capsid protein into an icosahedral capsid shell. The scaffolding proteins are essential to procapsid assembly. Here, we describe the solution-based biophysical and functional characterization of the bacteriophage lambda (λ) scaffolding protein gpNu3. The purified protein possesses significant α-helical structure and appears to be partially disordered. Thermally induced denaturation studies indicate that secondary structures are lost in a cooperative, apparent two-state transition (Tm = 40.6 ± 0.3 °C) and that unfolding is, at least in part, reversible. Analysis of the purified protein by size-exclusion chromatography suggests that gpNu3 is highly asymmetric, which contributes to an abnormally large Stokes radius. The size-exclusion chromatography data further indicate that the protein self-associates in a concentration-dependent manner. This was confirmed by analytical ultracentrifugation studies, which reveal a monomer-dimer equilibrium (Kd,app ~ 50 μM) and an asymmetric protein structure at biologically relevant concentrations. Purified gpNu3 promotes the polymerization of gpE, the λ major capsid protein, into virus-like particles that possess a native-like procapsid morphology. The relevance of this work with respect to procapsid assembly in the complex double-stranded DNA viruses is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Bacteriophage øX174 morphogenesis requires two scaffolding proteins: an internal species, similar to those employed in other viral systems, and an external species, which is more typically associated with satellite viruses. The current model of øX174 assembly is based on structural and in vivo data. During morphogenesis, 240 copies of the external scaffolding protein mediate the association of 12 pentameric particles into procapsids. The hypothesized pentameric intermediate, the 12S? particle, contains 16 proteins: 5 copies each of the coat, spike and internal scaffolding proteins and 1 copy of the DNA pilot protein. Assembly naïve 12S? particles and external scaffolding oligomers, most likely tetramers, formed procapsid-like particles in vitro, suggesting that the 12S? particle is a bona fide assembly intermediate and validating the current model of procapsid morphogenesis. The in vitro system required a crowding agent, was influenced by the ratio of the reactants and was most likely driven by hydrophobic forces. While the system reported here shared some characteristics with other in vitro internal scaffolding protein-mediated systems, it displayed unique features. These features most likely reflect external scaffolding protein-mediated morphogenesis and the øX174 procapsid structure, in which external scaffolding-scaffolding protein interactions, as opposed to coat-coat protein interactions between pentamers, constitute the primary lattice-forming contacts.  相似文献   

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