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R B Scheele  M A Lauffer 《Biochemistry》1967,6(10):3076-3081
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Assembly of tobacco mosaic virus   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
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Satellite tobacco mosaic virus (STMV) was probed using a variety of proteases. Consequences of the degradation were analyzed using gel electrophoresis, quasi-elastic light scattering (QELS), and atomic force microscopy (AFM). Proteolysis rates of 30 minutes for complete degradation of the protein capsid, up to many hours, were investigated. With each protease, degradation of virions 17 nm in diameter was shown by QELS to result in particles of 10 nm diameter, which is that of the RNA core observed in the virion by x-ray diffraction analysis. This was verified by direct visualization with atomic force microscopy. Using QELS, it was further shown that freshly prepared RNA cores remain as individual, stable, 10-nm condensed particles for 12 to 24 h. Clusters of particles then formed, followed by very large aggregates of 500 to 1000 nm diameter. AFM showed that the aggregates were composed of groups of the condensed RNA cores and were not due to unfolding of the nucleic acid. No unfolding of the core particles into extended conformation was seen by AFM until the samples were heated well beyond 90 degrees C. Mass spectrometry of RNA core particles revealed the presence of a major polypeptide whose amino acid sequence corresponded to residues 2 through 25 of the coat protein. Amino acids 13 through 25 were previously observed to be in direct contact with the RNA and are presumably protected from protease digestion. Low resolution difference Fourier analyses indicated the courses of the remainders of the amino terminal strands (amino acids 2-12) in intact virions. Any individual strand appears to have several choices of path, which accounts for the observed disorder at high resolution. These positively charged strands, serving as virtual polyamines, engage the helical segments of RNA. The intimate association of amino acid residues 2 through 25 with RNA likely contributes to the stability of the condensed conformation of the nucleic acid cores.  相似文献   

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The effects of absolute temperature (T), ionic strength (μ), and pH on the polymerization of tobacco mosaic virus protein from the 4 S form (A) to the 20 S form (D) were investigated by the method of sedimentation velocity. The loading concentration in grams per liter (C) was determined at which a just-detectable concentration (β) of 20 S material appeared. It was demonstrated experimentally that under the conditions employed herein, an equilibrium concentration of 20 S material was achieved in 3 h at the temperature of the experiment and that 20 S material dissociated again in 4 h or less to 4 S material either upon lowering the temperature or upon dilution. Thus, the use of thermodynamic equations for equilibrium processes was shown to be valid. The equation used to interpret the results, log (C?β) = constant + (ΔH12.3RT) + (ΔW1el2.3RT) ? K′ + ζpH, was derived from three separate models of the process, the only difference being in the anatomy of the constant; thus, the method of analysis is essentially independent of the model. ΔH1 and ΔW1el are the enthalpy and the change in electrical work per mole of A protein (the trimer of the polypeptide chain), Ks is the salting-out constant on the ionic strength basis, ζ is the number of moles of hydrogen ion bound per mole of A protein in the polymerization, and R is the gas constant. The three models leading to this equation are: a simple 11th-order equilibrium between A1 (the trimer of the polypeptide chain) and D, either the double disk or the double spiral of approximately the same molecular weight, designated model A; a second model, designated B, in which A1 was assumed to be in equilibrium with D at the same time that it is in equilibrium with A2, A3, etc., dimers and trimers, etc., of A1 in an isodesmic system; and a phase-separation model, designated model C, in which A protein is treated as a soluble material in equilibrium with D, considered as an insoluble phase. From electrical work theory, ΔWel1/T was shown to be essentially independent of T; therefore, in experiments at constant μ and constant pH the equation of log (C ? β) versus 1/T is linear with a slope of ΔH1/2.3R. The results fit such an equation over nearly a 20 °C-temperature range with a single value of ΔH1 of +32 kcal/mol A1. Results obtained when T and pH were held constant but μ was varied did not fit a straight line, which shows that more than simple salting-out is involved. When the effect of ionic strength on the electrical work contribution was considered in addition to salting-out, the data were interpreted to indicate a value of ΔW1el of 1.22 kcal/mol A1 at pH 6.7 and a value of 4.93 for Ks. When μ and T were held constant but pH was varied, and when allowance was made for the effect of pH changes on the electrical work contribution, a value of 1.1 was found for ζ. This means that something like 1.1 mol of hydrogen ion must be bound per mole of A1 protein in the formation of D. When this is added to the small amount of hydrogen ion bound per A1 before polymerization, at the pH values used, it turned out that for D to be formed, 1.5 H+ ions must be bound per A1 or 0.5 per protein polypeptide chain. This amounts to 1 H+ ion per polypeptide chain for half of the protein units, presumably those in one but not the other layer of the double disk or turn of the double spiral. When polymerization goes beyond the D stage, as shown by previously published data, additional H+ ions are bound. Simultaneous osmotic pressure studies and sedimentation studies were carried out, in both cases as a function of loading concentration C. These results were in complete disagreement with models A and C but agreed reasonably well with model B. The sedimentation studies permitted evaluation of the constant, β, to be 0.33 g/liter.  相似文献   

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Bovine serum albumin (BSA) causes tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) to crystallize at pH values where both have negative charges. The amount of albumin required to precipitate the virus varies inversely with ionic strength of added electrolyte. At pH values above 5, the precipitating power is greatest when BSA has the maximum total, positive plus negative, charge. Unlike early stages of the crystallization of TMV in ammonium sulfate-phosphate solutions, which can be reversed by lowering the temperature, the precipitation of TMV by BSA is not readily reversed by changes in temperature. The logarithm of the apparent solubility of TMV in BSA solutions, at constant ionic strength of added electrolyte, decreases linearly with increasing BSA concentration. This result and the correlation of precipitating power with total BSA charge suggest that BSA acts in the manner of a salting-out agent. The effect of BSA on the reversible entropy-driven polymerization of TMV protein (TMVP) depends on BSA concentration, pH, and ionic strength. In general, BSA promotes TMVP polymerization, and this effect increases with increasing BSA concentrations. The effect is larger at pH 6.5 than at pH 6. Even though increasing ionic strength promotes polymerization of TMVP in absence of BSA, the effect of increasing ionic strength from 0.08 to 0.18 at pH 6.5 decreases the polymerization-promoting effect of BSA. Likewise, the presence of BSA decreases the polymerization-promoting effect of ionic strength. The polymerization-promoting effect of BSA can be interpreted in terms of a process akin to salting-out. The mutual suppression of the polymerization-promoting effects of BSA and of electrolytes by each other can be partially explained in terms of salting-in of BSA.  相似文献   

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