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1.
Packaging of genetic material inside a capsid is one of the major processes in the lifecycle of bacteriophages. To establish the basic principles of packing double-stranded DNA into a phage, we present a low-resolution model of bacteriophage varphi29 and report simulations of DNA packaging. The simulations show excellent agreement with available experimental data, including the forces of packaging and the average structures seen in cryo-electron microscopy. The conformation of DNA inside the bacteriophage is primarily determined by the shape of the capsid and the elastic properties of DNA, but the energetics of packaging are dominated by electrostatic repulsions and the large entropic penalty associated with DNA confinement. In this slightly elongated capsid, the DNA assumes a folded toroidal conformation, rather than a coaxial spool. The model can be used to study packaging of other bacteriophages with different shapes under a range of environmental conditions.  相似文献   

2.
Parent-to-Progeny Transfer and Recombination of T4rII Bacteriophage   总被引:5,自引:3,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
Transfer of parental, light (not substituted with 5-bromodeoxyuridine) (32)P-deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) from rII(-) mutants of T4 bacteriophage to heavy (5-bromodeoxyuridine-substituted) progeny in Escherichia coli B was less homogeneous than in wild phages. The net transfer was 5 to 20% of the value for wild T4 phage, and the parental contribution per progeny DNA molecule amounted to 7 to 100% of the genome. Three classes could be distinguished, based on the density distribution of parental label in CsCl analysis of the progeny phages. "Far recombined" phages contain parental material only in semiconservatively replicated subunits covalently attached to progeny DNA, amounting to 5 to 10% parental contribution per genome. "Intermediate recombinants" contain, aside from conventional recombinant DNA, parental DNA banding at the original, light density. This DNA may be unattached to heavy progeny DNA or attached by weak bonds which are very sensitive to shearing during the extraction procedure. The parental contribution is 10 to 50% per progeny DNA molecule in this class. "Conservative" phages band close to the parental, light density in CsCl; their DNA is purely light. When the parental phage is labeled with both (3)H-leucine (capsid) and (32)P (DNA), the specific activity of (3)H/(32)P in the "conservative progeny" is 10 to 40% of that in the parental, showing that at least some of the (32)P in this area belongs to phages with parental DNA as the sole DNA component inside an unlabeled capsid, i.e., parental DNA which has been injected into the host and matured in a new capsid without replication or recombination. This phenomenon occurs to about the same extent in both single and multiple infection.  相似文献   

3.
In this report we propose a model in which after the herpes simplex virus (HSV) capsid docks at the nuclear pore, the tegument protein attached to the capsid must be cleaved by a serine or a cysteine protease in order for the DNA to be released into the nucleus. In support of the model are the following results. (i) Exposure of cells at the time of or before infection to l-(tosylamido-2-phenyl) ethyl chloromethyl ketone (TPCK), a serine-cysteine protease inhibitor, prevents the release of viral DNA or expression of viral genes. TPCK does not block viral gene expression after entry of viral DNA into the nucleus. (ii) The tegument protein VP1-2, the product of the U(L)36 gene, is cleaved shortly after the entry of the HSV 1 (HSV-1) virion into the cell. (iii) The proteolytic cleavage of VP1-2 does not occur in cells that are infected with HSV-1 under conditions that prevent the release of the viral DNA into the nucleus. (iv) The proteolytic cleavage of VP1-2 occurs only after the capsid is attached to the nuclear pore. Thus, TPCK prevented the release of HSV-1 DNA into the nucleus when added to medium 1 hour after infection with tsB7 at 39.5 degrees C followed by a shift down to the permissive temperature. The ts lesion maps in the U(L)36 gene. At the nonpermissive temperature, the capsids accumulate at the nuclear pore but the DNA is not released into the nucleus.  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.
Bacteriophage assembly frequently begins with the formation of a precursor capsid that serves as a DNA packaging machine. The DNA packaging is accompanied by a morphogenesis of the small round precursor capsid into a large polyhedral DNA-containing mature phage. In vitro, this transformation can be induced by heat or chemical treatment of P22 procapsids. In this work, we examine bacteriophage P22 morphogenesis by comparing three-dimensional structures of capsids expanded both in vitro by heat treatment and in vivo by DNA packaging. The heat-expanded capsid reveals a structure that is virtually the same as the in vivo expanded capsid except that the pentons, normally present at the icosahedral fivefold positions, have been released. The similarities of these two capsid structures suggest that the mechanism of heat expansion is similar to in vivo expansion. The loss of the pentons further suggests the necessity of specific penton-hexon interactions during expansion. We propose a model whereby the penton-hexon interactions are stabilized through interactions of DNA, coat protein, and other minor proteins. When considered in the context of other studies using chemical or heat treatment of capsids, our study indicates that penton release may be a common trend among double-stranded DNA containing viruses.  相似文献   

6.
Newcomb WW  Homa FL  Brown JC 《Journal of virology》2005,79(16):10540-10546
DNA enters the herpes simplex virus capsid by way of a ring-shaped structure called the portal. Each capsid contains a single portal, located at a unique capsid vertex, that is composed of 12 UL6 protein molecules. The position of the portal requires that capsid formation take place in such a way that a portal is incorporated into one of the 12 capsid vertices and excluded from all other locations, including the remaining 11 vertices. Since initiation or nucleation of capsid formation is a unique step in the overall assembly process, involvement of the portal in initiation has the potential to cause its incorporation into a unique vertex. In such a mode of assembly, the portal would need to be involved in initiation but not able to be inserted in subsequent assembly steps. We have used an in vitro capsid assembly system to test whether the portal is involved selectively in initiation. Portal incorporation was compared in capsids assembled from reactions in which (i) portals were present at the beginning of the assembly process and (ii) portals were added after assembly was under way. The results showed that portal-containing capsids were formed only if portals were present at the outset of assembly. A delay caused formation of capsids lacking portals. The findings indicate that if portals are present in reaction mixtures, a portal is incorporated during initiation or another early step in assembly. If no portals are present, assembly is initiated in another, possibly related, way that does not involve a portal.  相似文献   

7.
DNA toroids that form inside the bacteriophage capsid present different shapes according to whether they are formed by the addition of spermine or polyethylene glycol to the bathing solution. Spermine-DNA toroids present a convex, faceted section with no or minor distortions of the DNA interstrand spacing with respect to those observed in the bulk, whereas polyethylene glycol-induced toroids are flattened to the capsid inner surface and show a crescent-like, nonconvex shape. By modeling the energetics of the DNA toroid using a free-energy functional composed of energy contributions related to the elasticity of the wound DNA, exposed surface DNA energy, and adhesion between the DNA and the capsid, we established that the crescent shape of the toroidal DNA section comes from attractive interactions between DNA and the capsid. Such attractive interactions seem to be specific to the PEG condensation process and are not observed in the case of spermine-induced DNA condensation.  相似文献   

8.
The ejection of DNA from a bacterial virus (i.e., phage) into its host cell is a biologically important example of the translocation of a macromolecular chain along its length through a membrane. The simplest mechanism for this motion is diffusion, but in the case of phage ejection a significant driving force derives from the high degree of stress to which the DNA is subjected in the viral capsid. The translocation is further sped up by the ratcheting and entropic forces associated with proteins that bind to the viral DNA in the host cell cytoplasm. We formulate a generalized diffusion equation that includes these various pushing and pulling effects and make estimates of the corresponding speedups in the overall translocation process. Stress in the capsid is the dominant factor throughout early ejection, with the pull due to binding particles taking over at later stages. Confinement effects are also investigated, in the case where the phage injects its DNA into a volume comparable to the capsid size. Our results suggest a series of in vitro experiments involving the ejection of DNA into vesicles filled with varying amounts of binding proteins from phage whose state of stress is controlled by ambient salt conditions or by tuning genome length.  相似文献   

9.
Experiments are reported which bear on two spool models proposed for packaging the DNA of phage lambda. Both spool models fill an assumed spherical cavity with DNA wrapped in cylindrical or quasi-cylindrical layers composed of adjacent circular turns. In the curved-spool model, a single continuous segment of DNA, about 20% of the DNA length and probably located near the left end of the DNA, is in contact with the coat protein of the phage capsid. In the straight spool model, there are several DNA segments in contact with the capsid; they are concentrated in one half (probably the left half) of lambda DNA. We have identified the loci on the DNA which are in contact with the capsid by chemical crosslinking, induced by ultraviolet-irradiation of phage containing 5-bromodeoxyuridine in place of thymine.In an electron microscope experiment, phage are first lysed with EDTA, and then spread in a cytochrome c film by the formamide method. The disrupted capsid, which has the appearance of a phage ghost, serves as a marker showing where the DNA is crosslinked to the coat. The left end of the DNA is not distinguished from the right end, and so the map of DNA-capsid contacts is folded over on itself. Contacts are found nearly randomly over the entire map.In a second experiment, DNA from lysed, crosslinked phage is cut either with EcoRI or HindIII restriction endonucleases and the cut restriction fragments are labeled at their ends with 32P. Density centrifugation in a CsCl gradient separates free DNA from restriction fragments crosslinked to protein. After digestion with proteinase k, the DNA fragments previously crosslinked to protein are identified by size after agarose gel electrophoresis. DNA fragments from all parts of the genome are found.These two experiments show that, if the DNA of each phage is packaged identically, then the curved-spool model is ruled out and the straight spool model is unlikely. Alternatively, the manner of packaging the DNA may vary from one phage to the next. These results agree with other recent experiments on λ DNA packaging by Hall & Schellman (1982a,b), and by Haas et al. (1982).A different experiment is also reported. The psoralen derivative aminomethyltrioxalen (AMT) is allowed to intercalate into λ phage and then the DNA strands are crosslinked by ultraviolet-irradiation after the rapid phase of AMT intercalation is complete. The DNA is subsequently denatured by glyoxal modification and spread for electron microscopy in a cytochrome c film by the formamide method. Sites of AMT crosslinking appear duplex; uncrosslinked regions appear as single-stranded loops. AMT is found to intercalate throughout the λ DNA. Patterns of reacted sites appear different from one DNA molecule to the next, and no consistent pattern can be found. More extensive intercalation occurs with the deletion mutant λb221 than with phage of wild-type DNA length, and free DNA shows much more reaction than the DNA inside either phage type. In order for intercalation to occur, the DNA helix must unwind and become further extended. This experiment shows that regions throughout the entire DNA molecule can unwind and be extended by intercalation, which is not confined to a single DNA segment or to segments in one half of the DNA molecule, as would be expected for the two spool models if only the DNA in contact with the capsid were accessible to the dye.  相似文献   

10.
A biokinetic model is described which deals with the mathematical consequences of the inhibition or stimulation of DNA proofreading. It demonstrates the development of the number of DNA mismatch-dependent cells (e.g. cells with a malignant phenotype), where such mismatches arise by the in situ interaction of various substances with nucleotides of the DNA. The model can test for consequences by a logic gating on an "if-then" type of analysis in relation to the separate and consecutive processes of proofreading and repair. In particular, the consequences are considered in cases where either (i) the efficacy of proofreading and repair are reduced/prevented (inhibited) or (ii) are increased by some form of stimulation. On the chosen kinetic parameters, the model is accessible to manipulation as new data arising from further investigations become available and are introduced. The model is based on recently published data which show that an increased "mutant fraction" (see note on terms) arises in DNA replication when intracellular nucleotide pools show "asymmetries" (see note on terms). Extraordinarily high mutant fractions can be predicted/have been recorded in the presence of proofreading inhibitors. The model expresses data in mathematical terms of the competition between the development of mismatch-dependent cells and those with authentic genetic information. (Feedback and metastasis-effects and those of wild-type replicates are included.) A computerized (numerical) integration of the corresponding set of differential equations is offered. (A diskette with the program CANCER.xls is available upon request.)  相似文献   

11.
Herpesviruses replicate their double stranded DNA genomes as high-molecular-weight concatemers which are subsequently cleaved into unit-length genomes by a complex mechanism that is tightly coupled to DNA insertion into a preformed capsid structure, the procapsid. The herpes simplex virus type 1 UL25 protein is incorporated into the capsid during DNA packaging, and previous studies of a null mutant have demonstrated that its function is essential at the late stages of the head-filling process, either to allow packaging to proceed to completion or for retention of the viral genome within the capsid. We have expressed and purified an N-terminally truncated form of the 580-residue UL25 protein and have determined the crystallographic structure of the region corresponding to amino acids 134 to 580 at 2.1-Angstroms resolution. This structure, the first for any herpesvirus protein involved in processing and packaging of viral DNA, reveals a novel fold, a distinctive electrostatic distribution, and a unique "flexible" architecture in which numerous flexible loops emanate from a stable core. Evolutionary trace analysis of UL25 and its homologues in other herpesviruses was used to locate potentially important amino acids on the surface of the protein, leading to the identification of four putative docking regions for protein partners.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
Spherical virus capsids are large, multimeric protein shells whose assembly and stability depend on the establishment of multiple non-covalent interactions between many polypeptide subunits. In a foot-and-mouth disease virus capsid, 42 amino acid side chains per protomer are involved in noncovalent interactions between pentameric subunits that function as assembly/disassembly intermediates. We have individually truncated to alanine these 42 side chains and assessed their relevance for completion of the virus life cycle and capsid stability. Most mutations provoked a drastic reduction in virus yields. Nearly all of these critical mutations led to virions whose thermal inactivation rates differed from that of the parent virus, and many affected also early steps in the viral cycle. Rapid selection of genotypic revertants or variants with forward or compensatory mutations that restored viability was occasionally detected. The results with this model virus indicate the following. (i). Most of the residues at the interfaces between capsid subunits are critically important for viral function, in part but not exclusively because of their involvement in intersubunit recognition. Each hydrogen bond and salt bridge buried at the subunit interfaces may be important for capsid stability. (ii). New mutations able to restore viability may arise frequently at the subunit interfaces during virus evolution. (iii). A few interfacial side chains are functionally tolerant to truncation and may provide adequate mutation sites for the engineering of a thermostable capsid, potentially useful as an improved vaccine.  相似文献   

14.
Papillomaviruses are a family of nonenveloped DNA tumor viruses. Some sexually transmitted human papillomavirus (HPV) types, including HPV type 16 (HPV16), cause cancer of the uterine cervix. Papillomaviruses encode two capsid proteins, L1 and L2. The major capsid protein, L1, can assemble spontaneously into a 72-pentamer icosahedral structure that closely resembles native virions. Although the minor capsid protein, L2, is not required for capsid formation, it is thought to participate in encapsidation of the viral genome and plays a number of essential roles in the viral infectious entry pathway. The abundance of L2 and its arrangement within the virion remain unclear. To address these questions, we developed methods for serial propagation of infectious HPV16 capsids (pseudoviruses) in cultured human cell lines. Biochemical analysis of capsid preparations produced using various methods showed that up to 72 molecules of L2 can be incorporated per capsid. Cryoelectron microscopy and image reconstruction analysis of purified capsids revealed an icosahedrally ordered L2-specific density beneath the axial lumen of each L1 capsomer. The relatively close proximity of these L2 density buttons to one another raised the possibility of homotypic L2 interactions within assembled virions. The concept that the N and C termini of neighboring L2 molecules can be closely apposed within the capsid was supported using bimolecular fluorescence complementation or "split GFP" technology. This structural information should facilitate investigation of L2 function during the assembly and entry phases of the papillomavirus life cycle.  相似文献   

15.
P16 is a virion protein and, as such, is incorporated into the phage head as a step in morphogenesis. The role of P16 in assembly is not essential since particles are formed without this protein which appear normal by electron microscopy. P16 is essential when the particle infects a cell in the following cycle of infection. In the absence of functional P16, the infection does not appear to proceed beyond release of phage DNA from the capsid. No known genes are expressed, no DNA is transcribed, and the host cell survives the infection, continuing to grow and divide normally. The P16 function is required only during infection for the expression of phage functions. Induction in the absence of P16 proceeds with the expression of early and late genes and results in particle formation. P16 must be incorporated during morphogenesis into progeny particles after both infection and induction for the progeny to be infectious. The P16 function is necessary for transduction as well as for infection. Its activity is independent of new protein synthesis and it is not under immunity control. P16 can act in trans, but appears to act preferentially on the phage or phage DNA with which it is packaged. The data from complementation studies are compatible with P16 release from the capsid with the phage DNA. In the absence of P16 the infection is blocked, but the phage genome is not degraded. The various roles which have been ruled out for P16 are: (i) an early regulatory function, (ii) an enzymatic activity necessary for phage production, (iii) protection of phage DNA from host degradation enzymes, (iv) any generalized alteration of the host cell, (v) binding parental DNA to the replication complex, and (vi) any direct involvement in the replication of P22 DNA. P16 can be responsible for: (i) complete release of the DNA and disengagement from the capsid, (ii) bringing the released DNA to some necessary cell site or compartment such as the cytoplasm, (iii) removal of other virion proteins from the injected DNA, and (iv) alterations of the structure of the injected DNA.  相似文献   

16.
Capsid transformation during packaging of bacteriophage lambdaDNA.   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Assembly pathways of complex viruses might not be simple additions of one protein after another with rigid tertiary structure. It might in fact involve shifts in subunit structure, movement of subunits relative to each other to form new arrangements, transient action of proteins and protein segments, involvement of structure forming 'microenvironments' of the host. Thus morphogenesis of the bacteriophage lambda head starts with the formation of a core-containing DNA-free petit lambda particle. In a first transition, and dependent on a host function, the core is released, minor protein components of the capsid are processed and the particle's structure is altered, as shown by a change of its hydrodynamic properties. The resulting 'prehead' undergoes a second transition triggered by a complex of DNA and recognition protein (A-protein). This transition is more drastic than the first one. The particle doubles its volume without increasing in protein mass, the shell becomes thinner, and the surface structure is changed. Concomitantly with this process, the DNA becomes packaged and the particle becomes able to bind the small 'D-protein' in amounts equimolar to the capsid protein, which it could not do before. The D-protein addition probably causes another shift of the capsid structure. DNA packaging is completed, and the DNA is cut from concatemeric precursors to unit length molecules. Binding sites are created for the tail connector molecules which in turn allow the independently assembled tail to attach. Research on these processes proceeds along several lines: comparison of physical and chemical properties of particles accumulating in mutants; pulse-chase experiments on assembly precursors; morphogenesis in vitro; and model transitions of aberrant lambda polyheads.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Heat denaturation of native phages SD suspensions, phage "shadows", and isolated phage DNA solutions were studied by scanning microcalorimetry and viscosimetry. Energetic parameters of cooperative transitions of protein fraction and DNA were measured. DNA melting was shown to be preceded by the destruction of capsid and protein denaturation. The melting curve of isolated DNA and DNA in the presence of protein component is characterized by a fine structure which is completely restored at repeated denaturation only in the presence of the protein component. "Creeping" of DNA out of the capsid in heated suspensions at 50-52 degrees C was shown to proceed with "zero" enthalpy without significant endo- and exo-thermal effects. No change of specific heat capacity of the suspension was also observed. It is emphasized that the mechanism of DNA going out of the capsid can be understood by studying DNA hydration inside the phage and its change in the course of liberation of the phage genome from the protein capsid.  相似文献   

19.
The protective efficacy of recombinant vaccines expressing serotype 8 bluetongue virus (BTV-8) capsid proteins was tested in a mouse model. The recombinant vaccines comprised plasmid DNA or Modified Vaccinia Ankara viruses encoding BTV VP2, VP5 or VP7 proteins. These constructs were administered alone or in combination using either a homologous prime boost vaccination regime (rMVA/rMVA) or a heterologous vaccination regime (DNA/rMVA). The DNA/rMVA or rMVA/rMVA prime-boost were administered at a three week interval and all of the animals that received VP2 generated neutralising antibodies. The vaccinated and non-vaccinated-control mice were subsequently challenged with a lethal dose of BTV-8. Mice vaccinated with VP7 alone were not protected. However, mice vaccinated with DNA/rMVA or rMVA/rMVA expressing VP2, VP5 and VP7 or VP2 alone were all protected.  相似文献   

20.
It has previously been shown that: (i) during infection of its host, the DNA bacteriophage T7 assembles a DNA-free procapsid (capsid I), a capsid with an envelope differing physically and chemically from the capsid of the mature bacteriophage, and (ii) capsid I converts to a capsid (capsid II) with a bacteriophage-like envelope as it packages DNA. Lysates of phage T7-infected Escherichia coli contained a particle (AG particle) which copurified with capsid II during buoyant density sedimentation, velocity sedimentation, and solid support-free electrophoresis, but was distinguished from capsid II by its apparent diversity during electrophoresis in agarose gels. Treatment of AG particles with trypsin converted most of them to particles that comigrated with trypsin-treated capsid II during electrophoresis in agarose gels. Irreversible binding of AG particles to agarose gels was shown to contribute to the apparent diversity of AG particles during agarose gel electrophoresis. The results of quantitation of AG particles and of capsid I and capsid II in lysates of a nonpermissive host infected with T7 amber mutants suggested that, in site of their capsid II-like properties, most AG particles were produced during assembly of capsid I and not during DNA packaging. The presence of AG particles in T7 lysates explains contradictions in previous data concerning the pathway of T7 assembly.  相似文献   

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