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1.
Three non-capsid, phage-encoded proteins, pI, pIV and pXI, are required for assembly of the filamentous bacteriophage at the envelope of Escherichia coli. pIV forms the outer membrane component of the assembly site, and pI and pXI are predicted to form the cytoplasmic membrane component. pXI is the result of an in-frame internal translational initiation event in gene I and is identical with the carboxyl-terminal third of pI in amino acid sequence, membrane localization and topology. The two proteins share a cytoplasmic domain predicted to be an amphipathic helix, a transmembrane domain, and a periplasmic domain. By mutating the initiation site for pXI, a phage was made that produced only pI and was shown to absolutely require functional plasmid-encoded pXI for growth. Further mutational analysis was done to examine the functional determinants of the amphipathic helix and periplasmic domains of the pI and pXI proteins. The results show that the amphipathic helix region is very important for pI function but not for pXI function. Mutational analysis of the periplasmic domains of pI and pXI implies that these domains also perform separate functions, and suggests that the interaction between pI and pIV in the periplasm is critical for assembly. The results are discussed with regard to the separate roles that the pI and pXI proteins play in the overall process of phage assembly.  相似文献   

2.
The noncapsid assembly proteins pI and pI of the filamentous bacteriophage f1 are inserted into the inner membrane of Escherichia coli via an internal signal sequence. Inhibition of the activity of SecA with low concentrations of sodium azide results in rapid accumulation of pI and pI proteins in the cytoplasm. However, both proteins are inserted into the membrane under the same conditions when synthesized in bacteria containing a secA azide resistance mutation. The other noncapsid assembly protein, pIV, is an outer membrane protein synthesized with a cleavable signal sequence. Wild-type bacteria accumulate the precursor to pIV when protein synthesis is in the presence of low concentrations of sodium azide. These results suggest that the f1 bacteriophage assembly proteins require SecA and consequently the bacterial Sec system to reach their proper membrane location.  相似文献   

3.
The filamentous phage-encoded gene IV protein is required at high levels for virus assembly, although it is not a constituent of the virion. It is an integral membrane protein that does not contain an extended hydrophobic region of the kind often required for stable integration in the inner membrane. Rather, like a number of Escherichia coli outer membrane proteins, pIV is rich in charged amino acid residues and is predicted to consist of extensive beta-sheet structures. In phage-producing cells, pIV is primarily detected in the outer membrane, while in cells that produce it from the cloned gene, pIV is found in both the inner and outer membranes. The protein is synthesized as a precursor. Following cleavage of the signal sequence and translocation into the periplasm, the mature form is initially found as a soluble species. Soluble pIV then integrates into the membrane with a half-time of one to two minutes. Neither phage assembly nor other phage proteins are needed for this membrane integration, and phage assembly does not require the presence of the soluble form. The gene IV protein may be part of the structure through which the assembling phage is extruded.  相似文献   

4.
Related outer membrane proteins, termed secretins, participate in the secretion of macromolecules across the outer membrane of many Gram-negative bacteria. In the pullulanase-secretion system, PulS, an outer membrane-associated lipoprotein, is required both for the integrity and the proper outer membrane localization of the PulD secretin. Here we show that the PulS-binding site is located within the C-terminal 65 residues of PulD. Addition of this domain to the filamentous phage secretin, pIV, or to the unrelated maltose-binding protein rendered both proteins dependent on PulS for stability. A chimeric protein composed of bacteriophage f1 pIV and the C-terminal domain of PulD required properly localized PulS to support phage assembly. An in vivo complex formed between the pIV-PulD65 chimera and PulS was detected by co-immunoprecipitation and by affinity chromatography.  相似文献   

5.
The gene IV protein of filamentous bacteriophages is an integral membrane protein required for phage assembly and export. A series of gene IV::phoA fusion, gene IV deletion, and gene IV missense mutations have been isolated and characterized. The alkaline phosphatase activity of the fusion proteins suggests that pIV lacks a cytoplasmic domain. Cell fractionation studies indicate that the carboxy-terminal half of pIV mediates its assembly into the membrane, although there is no single, discrete membrane localization domain. The properties of gene IV missense and deletion mutants, combined with an analysis of the similarities between pIVs from various filamentous phage and related bacterial export-mediating proteins, suggest that the amino-terminal half of pIV consists of a periplasmic substrate-binding domain that confers specificity to the assembly-export system.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Filamentous phage f1 encodes protein IV (pIV), a protein essential for phage morphogenesis that localizes to the outer membrane of Escherichia coli, where it is found as a multimer of 10 to 12 subunits. Introduction of internal His or Strep affinity tags at different sites in pIV interfered with its function to a variable extent. A spontaneous second-site suppressor mutation in gene IV allowed several different insertion mutants to function. The identical mutation was also isolated as a suppressor of a multimerization-defective missense mutation. A high-molecular-mass pIV species is the predominant form of pIV present in cells. This species is stable in 4% sodium dodecyl sulfate at temperatures up to 65 degrees C and is largely preserved at 100 degrees C in Laemmli protein sample buffer containing 4% sodium dodecyl sulfate. The suppressor mutation makes the high-molecular-mass form of wild-type pIV extremely resistant to dissociation, and it stabilizes the high-molecular-mass form of several mutant pIV proteins to extents that correlate with their level of function. Mixed multimers of pIV(f1) and pIV(Ike) also remain associated during heating in sodium dodecyl sulfate-containing buffers. Thus, sodium dodecyl sulfate- and heat-resistant high-molecular-mass pIV is derived from pIV multimer and reflects the physiologically relevant form of the protein essential for assembly-export.  相似文献   

8.
Initiation of cell-free simian virus 40 (SV40) DNA replication requires the interaction of DNA polymerase alpha/primase with a preinitiation complex containing the viral T antigen and cellular proteins, replication protein A, and topoisomerase I or II. To further understand the molecular mechanisms of the transition from preinitiation to initiation, the intermolecular interaction between human DNA polymerase alpha and T antigen was investigated. We have demonstrated that the human DNA polymerase alpha catalytic polypeptide is able to associate with SV40 large T antigen directly under physiological conditions. A physical association between these two proteins was detected by coimmunoprecipitation with monoclonal antibodies from insect cells coinfected with recombinant baculoviruses. A domain of human polymerase alpha physically interacting with T antigen was identified within the amino-terminal region from residues 195 to 313. This domain of human polymerase alpha was able to form a nonproductive complex with T antigen, causing inhibition of the SV40 DNA replication in vitro. Kinetics of the inhibition indicated that this polymerase domain can inhibit viral replication only during the preinitiation stage. Extra molecules of T antigen could partially overcome the inhibition only prior to initiation complex formation. The data support the conclusion that initiation of SV40 DNA replication requires the physical interaction of T antigen in the preinitiation complex with the amino-terminal domain of human polymerase alpha from amino acid residues 195 to 313.  相似文献   

9.
Three proteins catalyze RNA-primed DNA synthesis on the lagging strand side of the replication fork of bacteriophage T7. Oligoribonucleotides are synthesized by T7 gene 4 protein, which also provides helicase activity. DNA synthesis is catalyzed by gene 5 protein of the phage, and processivity of DNA synthesis is conferred by Escherichia coli thioredoxin, a protein that is tightly associated with gene 5 protein. T7 DNA polymerase and gene 4 protein associate to form a complex that can be isolated by filtration through a molecular sieve. The complex is stable in 50 mM NaCl but is dissociated by 100 mM NaCl, a salt concentration that does not inhibit RNA-primed DNA synthesis. T7 DNA polymerase forms a stable complex with single-stranded M13 DNA at 50 mM NaCl as measured by gel filtration, and this complex requires 200 mM NaCl for dissociation, a salt concentration that inhibits RNA-primed DNA synthesis. Gene 4 protein alone does not bind to single-stranded DNA. In the presence of MgCl2 and dTTP or beta, gamma-methylene dTTP, a gene 4 protein-M13 DNA complex that is stable at 200 mM NaCl is formed. The affinity of DNA polymerase for both gene 4 protein and single-stranded DNA leads to the formation of a gene 4 protein-DNA polymerase-M13 DNA complex even in the absence of nucleoside triphosphates. However, the binding of each protein to DNA plays an important role in mediating the interaction of the proteins with each other. High concentrations of single-stranded DNA inhibit RNA-primed DNA synthesis by diluting the amount of proteins bound to each template and reducing the frequency of protein-protein interactions. Preincubation of gene 4 protein, DNA polymerase, and M13 DNA in the presence of dTTP forms protein-DNA complexes that most efficiently catalyze RNA-primed DNA synthesis in the presence of excess single-stranded competitor DNA.  相似文献   

10.
Structure of the filamentous phage pIV multimer by cryo-electron microscopy   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The homo-multimeric pIV protein constitutes a channel required for the assembly and export of filamentous phage across the outer membrane of Escherichia coli. We present a 22 A-resolution three-dimensional reconstruction of detergent-solubilized pIV by cryo-electron microscopy associated with image analysis. The structure reveals a barrel-like complex, 13.5 nm in diameter and 24 nm in length, with D14 point-group symmetry, consisting of a dimer of unit multimers. Side views of each unit multimer exhibit three cylindrical domains named the N-ring, the M-ring and the C-ring. Gold labeling of pIV engineered to contain a single cysteine residue near the N or C terminus unambiguously identified the N-terminal region as the N-ring, and the C-terminal region was inferred to make up the C-ring. A large pore, ranging in inner diameter from 6.0 nm to 8.8 nm, runs through the middle of the multimer, but a central domain, the pore gate, blocks it. Moreover, the pore diameter at the N-ring is smaller than the phage particle. We therefore propose that the pIV multimer undergoes a large conformational change during phage transport, with reorganization of the central domain to open the pore, and widening at the N-ring in order to accommodate the 6.5 nm diameter phage particle.  相似文献   

11.
DNA polymerase III holoenzyme was assembled from pure proteins onto a primer template scaffold. The assembly process could be divided into two stages. In the time-consuming first stage, beta subunit and gamma.delta subunit complex were required in forming a tightly bound ATP-activated "preinitiation complex" with a single-stranded DNA bacteriophage circle uniquely primed with a synthetic pentadecadeoxyribonucleotide. This finding substantiates an earlier study using crude protein preparations in a homopolymer system lacking Escherichia coli single-stranded DNA binding protein (Wickner, S. (1976) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 73, 3511-3515). In the second stage, the polymerase III core and the tau subunit rapidly seek out and bind the preinitiation complex to form DNA polymerase III holoenzyme capable of rapid and entirely processive replication of the circular DNA. ATP is not required beyond formation of the preinitiation complex. It is remarkable that the fully assembled DNA polymerase III holoenzyme is so stably bound to the primed DNA circle (4-min half-time of dissociation), yet upon completing a round of synthesis the polymerase cycles within 10 s to a new preinitiation complex on a challenge primed DNA circle. Efficient polymerase cycling only occurred when challenge primed DNA was endowed with a preinitiation complex implying that cycling is mediated by a polymerase subassembly which dissociates from its accessory proteins and associates with a new preinitiation complex. These subunit dynamics suggest mechanisms for polymerase cycling on the lagging strand of replication forks in a growing chromosome.  相似文献   

12.
13.
The secretion of pathogenicity factors by Salmonella typhimurium is mediated by a type III secretion system that includes an outer membrane protein of the secretin family. Related secretins are also required for f1 phage assembly and type II secretion. When the C-terminal 43 amino acids of the S. typhimurium secretin InvG are added to f1 pIV, the chimeric f1 pIV-'InvG43 protein becomes dependent on the co-expression of another gene, invH , for function in phage assembly. [3H]-palmitic acid labelling, globomycin sensitivity and density gradient flotation were used to demonstrate that InvH is an outer membrane lipoprotein that is processed by signal peptidase II. A complex between chimeric f1 pIV-'InvG43 and InvH was demonstrated in vivo. InvH was shown to be required for the proper localization of InvG in the outer membrane and for the secretion of the virulence factor SipC. These results suggest that InvH and InvG are part of the functional outer membrane translocation complex in type III secretion systems.  相似文献   

14.
The filamentous phage protein pIV is required for assembly and secretion of the virus and possesses regions homologous to those found in a number of Gram-negative bacterial proteins that are essential components of a widely distributed extracellular protein-export system. These proteins form multimers that may constitute an outer membrane channel that allows phage/protein egress. Three sets of f1 gene IV mutants were isolated at positions that are absolutely (G355 and P375) or largely (F381) conserved amongst the 16 currently known family members. The G355 mutants were non-functional, interfered with assembly of plV+ phage, and made Escherichia coli highly sensitive to deoxycholate. The P375 mutants were non-functional and defective in multimerization. Many of the F381 mutants retained substantial function, and even those in which charged residues had been introduced supported some phage assembly. Some inferences about the roles of these conserved amino acids are made from the mutant phenotypes.  相似文献   

15.
λCII is the key protein that influences the lysis/lysogeny decision of λ by activating several phage promoters. The effect of CII is modulated by a number of phage and host proteins including Escherichia coli HflK and HflC. These membrane proteins copurify as a tightly bound complex ‘HflKC’ that inhibits the HflB (FtsH)-mediated proteolysis of CII both in vitro and in vivo. Individual purification of HflK and HflC has not been possible so far, since each requires the presence of the other for proper folding. We report the first purification of HflK and HflC separately as active and functional proteins and show that each can interact with HflB on its own and each inhibits the proteolysis of CII. They also inhibit the proteolysis of E. coli σ32 by HflB. We show that at low concentrations each protein is dimeric, based on which we propose a scheme for the mutual interactions of HflB, HflK and HflC in a supramolecular HflBKC protease complex.  相似文献   

16.
It is becoming clear that in vivo phage DNA ejection is not a mere passive process. In most cases, both phage and host proteins seem to be involved in pulling at least part of the viral DNA inside the cell. The DNA ejection mechanism of Bacillus subtilis bacteriophage phi29 is a two-step process where the linear DNA penetrates the cell with a right-left polarity. In the first step approximately 65% of the DNA is pushed into the cell. In the second step, the remaining DNA is actively pulled into the cytoplasm. This step requires protein p17, which is encoded by the right-side early operon that is ejected during the first push step. The membrane protein p16.7, also encoded by the right-side early operon, is known to play an important role in membrane-associated phage DNA replication. In this work we show that, in addition, p16.7 is required for efficient execution of the second pull step of DNA ejection.  相似文献   

17.
18.
19.
The EcoRI and HindII restriction endonucleases and pBR325 vector plasmid were used to obtain a set of hybrid plasmids containing ColIb-P9 fragments carrying the characters for colicin Ib synthesis and immunity and the ability to inhibit T5 phage growth. The genes responsible for colicin synthesis and immunity are closely linked and localized in the EcoRI fragment with a molecular weight of 1.85 MD (pIV41) or in the HindII fragment of 2.4 MD (pIV1). The clones containing these plasmids show an increased level of both spontaneous and mitomycin C-induced colicin synthesis and an increased level of immunity due to a larger dosage of the genes. The genes controlling T5 growth inhibition are localized in other restriction fragments of ColIb DNA: the EcoRI fragment of 1.45 MD (pIV7) and the HindII fragment of 4.3 MD (pIV5). We have demonstrated by means of hybrid plasmids that T5 growth inhibition is not connected with the colicin Ib synthesized in infected cells and is controlled by other specific product(s) of the ColIb plasmid genes. T5 phage growth was as efficient in clones containing plasmids with cloned colicin Ib genes as in a strain without plasmids. An investigation of the expression of the genes inhibiting T5 phage growth in an in vitro protein synthesis system has revealed a protein with a molecular weight of 36 000 which seems to take part in the process.  相似文献   

20.
Using simple design and selective pressure, we have evolved an artificial M13 bacteriophage coat protein. M13 coat proteins first reside in the bacterial inner membrane and subsequently surround the DNA core of the assembled virus. The artificial coat protein (ACP) was designed and evolved to mimic both functions of the natural M13 coat proteins, but with an inverted orientation. ACP is a non-functional coat protein because it is not required for the production of phage particles. Instead, it incorporates into a phage coat which still requires all the natural coat proteins for structural integrity. In contrast with other M13 coat proteins, which can display polypeptides as amino-terminal fusions, ACP permits the carboxy-terminal display of large polypeptides. The results suggest that viruses can co-opt host membrane proteins to acquire new coat proteins and thus new functions. In particular, M13 bacteriophage can be engineered for new functions, such as carboxy-terminal phage display.  相似文献   

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