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1.
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   

2.
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   

3.
Petit bacteriophage λ is a hollow λ head precursor which is found in λ-infected lysates, including lysates of phage λ carrying mutations in head genes. Wild-type petit λ has a protein composition similar to heads, except that it is missing pD 4, a major component of heads. About 95% of the mass of petit λ is pE, the major structural protein of heads, and in addition it has proteins pB, h3, X1, and X2. Tryptic fingerprint analysis shows that h3 is a proteolytic cleavage product of pB, and previous experiments have shown that X1 and X2 are protein fusion products, closely related to each other and containing amino acid sequences of both pC and pE. Petit lambdas derived from infection by phages defective in genes A or D are indistinguishable from wild-type petit λ. B, C, or groE defective petit lambdas show differences from wild-type in protein composition and in extent of protein processing. On the basis of the properties of mutant petit lambdas it is concluded that: (1) the protein processing reactions (cleavage of pB; fusion of pC with pE) occur on the petit λ structure; (2) cleavage of pB requires the functioning of genes C and groE but not A or D; (3) fusion of pC and pE requires gene groE but not A, B or D; (4) pNu3 participates directly in petit λ assembly but is lost from the structure by the time assembly is complete.Physical studies of petit λ show that wild-type, A, B and D petit lambdas sediment at 150 S, while C and groE petit lambdas sediment at 190 S. Purified petit λ of either class has an ultraviolet absorption spectrum characteristic of pure protein.  相似文献   

4.
Host participation in bacteriophage lambda head assembly   总被引:55,自引:0,他引:55  
Mutants of Escherichia coli, called groE, specifically block assembly of bacteriophage λ heads. When groE bacteria are infected by wild type λ, phage adsorption, DNA injection and replication, tail assembly, and cell lysis are all normal. No active heads are formed, however, and head related “monsters” are seen in lysates. These monsters are similar to the structures seen on infection of wild-type cells by phage defective in genes B or C.We have isolated mutants of λ which can overcome the block in groE hosts and have mapped these mutants. All groE mutations can be compensated for by mutation of phage gene E (hence the name groE). Gene E codes for the major structural subunit of the phage head. Some groE mutants, called groEB, can be compensated by mutation in either gene E or in gene B. Gene B is another head gene.During normal head assembly the protein encoded by phage head gene B or C appears to be converted to a lower molecular weight form, h3, which is found in phage. The appearance of h3 protein in fast sedimenting head related structures requires the host groE function.We suggest that the proteins encoded by phage genes E, B and C, and the bacterial component defined by groE mutations act together at an early stage in head assembly.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Head-tail connector of bacteriophage lambda   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The head-tail connector of phage λ, a protein knob inside the head shell to which the tail attaches, is composed primarily of head protein gpB 4 and its cleaved form gpB1. All of the gpB and gpB1 in the virion is located in the connector. gpFII, the protein that is thought to form the site on the head to which the tail binds, is also located in the connector. Head proteins gpE, gpD, X1 and X2 are not components of the connector. These assignments were made by disrupting virions with guanidine hydrochloride, in such a way that heads and tails separate with the connectors attached to the tails, and determining which head proteins co-purify with the tails.We find that lysates from a λE? infection contain a high proportion of tails with connectors attached. (Gene E codes for the major component of the head shell.) Connectors are also present on tails from a λE?C? infection, arguing that gpE, gpC, and their processed forms, X1 and X2, are all unnecessary for assembly of biologically competent connectors. The gpB in the connectors on E? and E?C? tails is in the uncleaved form. Connectors are not seen on tails from infections by λE?B?, λE?FII?, or λE? in a groE? host.  相似文献   

7.
We have identified and characterized structural intermediates in phage P22 assembly. Three classes of particles can be isolated from P22-infected cells: 500 S full heads or phage, 170 S empty heads, and 240 S “proheads”. One or more of these classes are missing from cells infected with mutants defective in the genes for phage head assembly. By determining the protein composition of all classes of particles from wild type and mutant-infected cells, and examining the time-course of particle assembly, we have been able to define many steps in the pathway of P22 morphogenesis.In pulse-chase experiments, the earliest structural intermediate we find is a 240 S prohead; it contains two major protein species, the products of genes 5 and 8. Gene 5 protein (p5) is the major phage coat protein. Gene 8 protein is not found in mature phage. The proheads contain, in addition, four minor protein species, PI, P16, P20 and PX. Similar prohead structures accumulate in lysates made with mutants of three genes, 1, 2 and 3, which accumulate uncut DNA. The second intermediate, which we identify indirectly, is a newly filled (with DNA) head that breaks down on isolation to 170 S empty heads. This form contains no P8, but does contain five of the six protein species of complete heads. Such structures accumulate in lysates made with mutants of two genes, 10 and 26.Experiments with a temperature-sensitive mutant in gene 3 show that proheads from such 3? infected cells are convertible to mature phage in vivo, with concomitant loss of P8. The molecules of P8 are not cleaved during this process and the data suggest that they may be re-used to form further proheads.Detailed examination of 8? lysates revealed aberrant aggregates of P5. Since P8 is required for phage morphogenesis, but is removed from proheads during DNA encapsulation, we have termed it a scaffolding protein, though it may have DNA encapsulation functions as well.All the experimental observations of this and the accompanying paper can be accounted for by an assembly pathway, in which the scaffolding protein P8 complexes with the major coat protein P5 to form a properly dimensioned prohead. With the function of the products of genes 1, 2 and 3, the prohead encapsulates and cuts a headful of DNA from the concatemer. Coupled with this process is the exit of the P8 molecules, which may then recycle to form further proheads. The newly filled heads are then stabilized by the action of P26 and gene 10 product to give complete phage heads.  相似文献   

8.
The functions of ten known late genes are required for the intracellular assembly of infectious particles of the temperate Salmonella phage P22. The defective phenotypes of mutants in these genes have been characterized with respect to DNA metabolism and the appearance of phage-related structures in lysates of infected cells. In addition, proteins specified by eight of the ten late genes were identified by sodium dodecyl sulfate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis; all but two are found in the mature phage particle. We do not find cleavage of these proteins during morphogenesis.The mutants fall into two classes with respect to DNA maturation; cells infected with mutants of genes 5, 8, 1, 2 and 3 accumulate DNA as a rapidly sedimenting complex containing strands longer than mature phage length. 5? and 8? lysates contain few phage-related structures. Gene 5 specifies the major head structural protein; gene 8 specifies the major protein found in infected lysates but not in mature particles. 1?, 2? and 3? lysates accumulate a single distinctive class of particle (“proheads”), which are spherical and not full of DNA, but which contain some internal material. Gene 1 protein is in the mature particle, gene 2 protein is not.Cells infected with mutants of the remaining five genes (10, 26, 16, 20 and 9) accumulate mature length DNA. 10? and 26? lysates accumulate empty phage heads, but examination of freshly lysed cells shows that many were initially full heads. These heads can be converted to viable phage by in vitro complementation in concentrated extracts. 16? and 20? lysates accumulate phage particles that appear normal but are non-infectious, and which cannot be rescued in vitro.From the mutant phenotypes we conclude that an intact prohead structure is required to mature the virus DNA (i.e. to cut the overlength DNA concatemer to the mature length). Apparently this cutting occurs as part of the encapsulation event.  相似文献   

9.
In a previous study, various intermediates in λ DNA packaging were visualized after lysis of λ-infected cells with osmotic shock and sedimentation through a sucrose formalin cushion onto electron microscope grids. Along this line, a systematic screening for intermediates accumulated in all head mutants available was performed. λA?-infected cells accumulate only empty spherical protein shells (petit λ) bound at an intermediate point along the DNA thread. In situ digestion experiments with restriction endonuclease EcoRI show that the petit λ-DNA complexes are formed at a fixed point on the DNA concatemer. In λNu1?-infected cells, however, most petit λ was not bound to DNA. In Fec? cells, which are defective in formation of concatemers but normal in head protein synthesis, most petit λ did not sediment onto the carbon film of the grid. In D? mutant, petit λ, partially full heads and empty heads with released DNA were observed. λFI?-infected cells also accumulate petit λ and partially full heads. The present studies suggest that protein pNu1 is required for complex formation between head precursors and DNA concatemers, pA for the initiation of DNA packaging, pD and pFI for the promotion of DNA packaging, and pD for stabilization of head structures. The results obtained with other head mutants involved in formation of mature proheads and head completion confirm earlier results obtained by different techniques.  相似文献   

10.
This study examined the influence of shell shape on the distribution and movement patterns of three species of Hawaiian hermit crabs: Calcinus elegans, C. laevimanus, and C. latens. Field surveys showed strong differences in shell use depending on habitat. Individuals of C.elegans and C. latens were more frequently in unusual shapes of shells (the cowrie Cypraea caputserpentis and the variable worm shell Serpulorbis variabilis) when in tide pools and in more standard gastropod shells, such as the dog whelk Nassarius papillosus, when found in the subtidal. In addition, for both C.elegans and C. latens in tide pools, most crabs in unusual shaped shells were out on top of rocks, whereas most crabs in shells that were standard shapes were under rocks.In the laboratory, individuals of C.elegans and C. laevimanus in unusual shells initiated more shell exchanges and when given empty shells crabs readily occupied the standard shaped shells, but crabs did not move into the unusual shaped shells. Mark-recapture experiments in the field showed that C. elegans in standard shaped shells moved out of tide pools and stayed longer when placed on subtidal coral heads, whereas crabs in unusual shaped shells stayed in tide pools and did not stay on subtidal coral heads (in part due to predation). Laboratory tests showed that C. elegans in unusual shaped shells were more readily dislodged by surge than crabs in standard shaped shells. Thus, the difference in movement patterns in preferred vs. unpreferred shell shapes is an important factor influencing the microhabitat distribution of these hermit crabs.  相似文献   

11.
In the accompanying paper (Sternberg, 1973) the properties of three independently isolated strains of Escherichia coli with groE mutations (NS-1, NS-2 and NS-3) have been characterized. In this report the ability of these strains to propagate phage λ is examined in greater detail. In the temperature -sensitive groE strain NS-1, all early phage functions tested (curing, infective center formation, DNA synthesis and early messenger RNA synthesis) are expressed normally. In addition, two late phage functions (late mRNA synthesis and tail formation) are also expressed normally, and a third, phage-induced cell lysis, is expressed with only a slight delay. Based upon head-tail in vitro complementation assays, however, λ fails to make any functional heads at elevated temperatures (41 °C) in this host. Electron microscopic studies of strain NS-1 defective lysates indicate that aberrant head-like forms, including tubular forms and “monsters,” are made.Mutants of λ, designated λEP, which are able to grow in the three groE strains, have been isolated. An analysis of these mutants indicates that at least some carry a mutation in λ head gene E and these make reduced levels of active gene E protein in groE hosts.A further study of all known λ head genes indicates that it is the interaction between the gene E protein and the proteins specified by head genes B and C that is adversely affected by the groE mutation. Presumably, the relative level of gene E protein is too high in groE strains for proper head formation. The λEP mutation compensates for this effect by reducing the level of this protein, and so restoring a balance.  相似文献   

12.
Like several other Escherichia coli bacteriophages, transposable phage Mu does not develop normally in groE hosts (M. Pato, M. Banerjee, L. Desmet, and A. Toussaint, J. Bacteriol. 169:5504–5509, 1987). We show here that lysates obtained upon induction of groE Mu lysogens contain free inactive tails and empty heads. GroEL and GroES are thus essential for the correct assembly of both Mu heads and Mu tails. Evidence is presented that groE mutations inhibit processing of the phage head protein gpH as well as the formation of a 25S complex suspected to be an early Mu head assembly intermediate.  相似文献   

13.
Electrophoresis studies showed that at least three phage-specified proteins undergo proteolytic cleavage during the development of bacteriophage T5. One of these proteins has a molecular weight of about 135,000 and the product of this cleavage reaction is a minor component of the T5 tail, having a molecular weight of about 128,000. All of the tail-defective T5 mutants studied in this report failed to induce this cleavage reaction under restrictive conditions. This reaction also failed to occur in Escherichia coli groEA639 and groEA36 infected with wild type T5. Examination of lysates of infected groE cells in the electron microscope revealed the presence of filled and empty heads as well as tubular head structures, but no tails were detected. The filled heads were able to combine with separately prepared T5 tails in vitro to form infectious phage particles. Therefore, propagation of T5 in these groE mutants is prevented primarily by a specific block in tail assembly. A T5 mutant, T5?6, was isolated, which has the capacity to propagate in these groE hosts. The gene locus in T5?6 was mapped.The second T5 protein which is cleaved has a molecular weight of 50,000 and is related to head morphogenesis. Treatment of infected cells with l-canavanine (50 μg/ml) inhibited cleavage of this polypeptide. Only small quantities of the major head protein (32,000 mol. wt) were produced in these treated cells. Treatment with canavanine lead to production of tubular heads. The major protein component of partially purified tubular heads has a molecular weight of 50,000. Cells infected with T5 amber H30b, a mutant defective in head gene D20, does not produce the 50,000 and 32,000 molecular weight proteins. These findings suggest that the 50,000 molecular weight protein undergoes cleavage to form the major head polypeptide. A third T5 protein is cleaved to form a minor head component with a molecular weight of 43,000 and its cleavage is linked to that involving the major head protein.  相似文献   

14.
Bacteriophage φ6 has been studied by small-angle X-ray scattering, intensity-fluctuation spectroscopy, analytical ultracentrifugation, and spectroscopy. The sedimentation coefficient (s200, w) is 375 S, the diffusion coefficient (D200, w) is 2.66 · 10?8 cm2/s. Using the Svedberg equation and an estimate of the partial specific volume, the Mr is 1.49 ± 0.32 · 108.A simple model which describes φ6, is a central sphere consisting of RNA and protein of radius 330 Å and an outer shell of low electron density 40 Å thick. The RNA may form five concentric shells in the region r = 140?290 A?  相似文献   

15.
Petit λ is an empty spherical shell of protein which appears wherever λ grows. If phage DNA and petit λ are added to a cell-free extract of induced lysogenic bacteria, then phage particles are formed that contain the DNA and protein from the petit λ. Petit λ is transformed, without dissociation, into a phage head by addition of DNA and more phage proteins.The products of ten genes, nine phage and one host, are required for λ head assembly. Among these, the products of four phage genes, E, B, C, and Nu3 and of the host gene groE are involved in the synthesis of petit λ, consequently these proteins are dispensable for head assembly in extracts to which petit λ has been added. The products of genes A and D allow DNA to combine with petit λ to form a head that has normal morphology. In an extract, DNA can react with A product and petit λ to become partially DNAase-resistant, as if an unstable DNA-filled intermediate were formed. ATP and spermidine are needed at this stage. This intermediate is subsequently stabilized by addition of D product. The data suggest a pathway for head assembly.  相似文献   

16.
Petite T4 phage particles have a shorter head than normal T4 phage and contain less DNA. They are not viable in single infections but are able to complement each other in multiply infected cells. Such particles normally make up 1 to 3% of T4 lysates. We show here that lysates of T4 grown on Escherichia coli H560 (end-A?, pol-A?) contain 33% of such petite particles. These particles are identical in physical and biological properties to those described previously, only their high frequency is abnormal. The frequency of petite particles in lysates grown on H560 is controlled by the presence or absence of the gene for DNA polymerase I (pol-A1) and apparently also a gene for endonuclease I (end-A). The involvement of these host DNA enzymes with T4 head morphology and DNA content indicates that DNA is directly involved in head morphogenesis. Such an involvement is incompatible with models of T4 head morphogenesis in which dimensionally stable, preformed empty heads are precursors of filled heads. The processing or repair of DNA apparently helps decide whether the assembly of T4 head subunits produces normal or petite heads.  相似文献   

17.
Alteration of physical habitat structure is a fundamental mechanism by which invaders produce ecosystem level effects. We assessed whether, along the east coast of Australia, the impacts of the non-native gastropod Maoricolpus roseus on soft-sediment habitats extend beyond the range of live populations as a result of shell export following death of animals. Sampling over an 18 month period revealed that M. roseus shells were temporally persistent in surface sediments of a coastal lagoon devoid of live populations of the gastropod. The well-preserved shells, of which 92% were entire, did not accumulate above a maximal density of 260 m− 2 due to periodic burial. Manipulation of M. roseus shell densities indicated that at densities (140 m− 2) presently experienced within surface sediments of the lagoon, the structure provided by the shells was weakly facilitative of some invertebrate species. Further increasing shell densities to the possible future scenario of 280 m− 2, which may occur under continued expansion of nearby live populations did not, however, strengthen positive effects. To the contrary, plots with higher densities of M. roseus shells contained similar invertebrate assemblages to control plots, without shells. Consistent with the negligible effects of M. roseus shells on infauna, the foraging efficiency of the generalist predator, Carcinus maenas, and the naticid gastropod, Polinices sordidus, were not affected by addition of shells. Surprisingly, even an extreme scenario of 1600 m− 2 did not affect their predation. Thus, in this dynamic coastal lagoon, that experiences considerable sediment movement and environmental variability, the structure introduced by import of non-native shells is unimportant in structuring soft-sediment communities. Whether this unrecognised aspect of molluscan invasions impacts the ecology of more stable coastal environments remains unclear and warrants further consideration.  相似文献   

18.
We developed a system for DNA packaging of isolated bacteriophage T4 proheads in vitro and studied the role of prohead expansion in DNA packaging. Biologically active proheads have been purified from a number of packaging-deficient mutant extracts. The cleaved mature prohead is the active structural precursor for the DNA packaging reaction. Packaging of proheads requires ATP, Mg2+ and spermidine, and is stimulated by polyethylene glycol and dextran. Predominantly expanded proheads (ELPs) are produced at 37 degrees C and predominantly unexpanded proheads (ESPs) are produced at 20 degrees C. Both the expanded and unexpanded proheads are active in DNA packaging in vitro. This is based on the observations that (1) both ESPs and ELPs purified by chromatography on DEAE-Sephacel showed DNA packaging activity; (2) apparently homogeneous ELPs prepared by treatment with sodium dodecyl sulfate (which dissociates ESPs) retained significant biological activity; (3) specific precipitation of ELPs with anti-hoc immunoglobulin G resulted in loss of DNA packaging activity; and (4) ESPs upon expansion in vitro to ELPs retained packaging activity. Therefore, contrary to the models that couple DNA packaging to head expansion, in T4 the expansion and packaging appear to be independent, since the already expanded DNA-free proheads can be packaged in vitro. We therefore propose that the unexpanded to expanded prohead transition has evolved to stabilize the capsid and to reorganize the prohead shell functionally from a core-interacting to a DNA-interacting inner surface.  相似文献   

19.
The shells of the Atlantic surf clam, Spisula solidissima (Dillwyn), contain a record of both life history and environmental changes. These shell records were investigated using oxygen and carbon stable isotopic analyses (δ18O, δ13C) and shell growth increment analyses. δ18O variations across annual shell increments reflect the yearly cycle of sea-water temperatures off the New Jersey coast, further documenting the proposed annual periodicity of the major shell increments. The 11-yr shell record analyzed here confirms that shell growth is most rapid in spring-early summer, slow in late summer-fall, and extremely slow or non-existent in winter. Shell growth appears to occur in isotopic equilibrium with sea water and measured δ18O values are used to refine the aragonite-water temperature scale. Variations in the timing of annual growth increment formation are noted as well as ontogenetic effects upon the range of isotopic values recorded in shell carbonate. Both the δ18O and δ13C profiles are influenced by changes in the sea-water temperature regime over the 11-yr period studied (1965–1976) and record these effects in the shell. The combination of stable isotope and growth increment analyses provides a powerful tool for interpreting the shell records of both modern and fossil molluscs.  相似文献   

20.
Modeling of nonlinear optical properties of spherical core–shell gold–silver and silver–gold nanoparticles (NPs) placed in water was carried out on the base of extended Mie theory. Efficiency cross sections of absorption σ abs, scattering σ sca, and extinction σ ext of radiation with wavelengths λ?=?400 and 532 nm for core–shell NPs with constant core radii r 00?=?5, 10, 20, and 40 nm and in the range of relative radii r 1/r 00?=?1–8 were calculated (r 1 is the radius of shell). Dependences of optical properties of gold–silver and silver–gold NPs on increasing of core radius r 0 in the range 0???r 1 under condition r 1?=?const and increasing of r 0 under r 1???r 0?=?const were investigated. Results show the nonlinear behavior of optical properties of core–shell gold–silver and silver–gold NPs on radiation wavelengths (optical indexes of metals), different core and shell radii, and their correlation, on relative NP radii r 1/r 00. An increase and decrease of absorption, scattering, and extinction efficiency cross sections of core–shell NPs with changing of wavelengths, core and shell radii, and relative NP radii r 1/r 00 are established. These dependences can be used for experimental investigation of the interesting first stages of shell formation on core and optical determination of core–shell NP parameters.  相似文献   

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