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1.
Bacteriophage P22 DNA packaging events occur in processive series on concatemeric phage DNA molecules. At the point where such series initiate, the DNA is recognized at a site called pac, and most molecular left ends are generated within six short regions called end sites, which are present in a 120 base-pair region surrounding the pac site. The bacteriophage P22 genes 2 and 3 proteins are required for successful generation of these ends and DNA packaging during progeny virion assembly. Mutants lacking the 162-amino-acid gene 3 protein replicate DNA and assemble functional procapsids. In this report we describe the nucleotide changes and DNA packaging phenotypes of a number of missense mutations of gene 3, which give the phage a higher than normal frequency of generalized transduction. In cells infected by these mutants, more packaging events initiate on the host chromosome than in wild-type infections, so the mutations are thought to affect the specificity of packaging initiation. In addition to having this phenotype, these mutations affect the process of phage DNA packaging in detectable ways. They may: (1) alter the target site specificity for packaging; (2) make target site recognition more promiscuous; (3) affect end site utilization; (4) alter the pac site; and (5) cause apparent random DNA packaging series initiation on phage DNA.  相似文献   

2.
Bacteriophage P22 is thought to package its double-stranded DNA chromosome from concatemeric replicating DNA in a "processive" sequential fashion. According to this model, during the initial packaging event in such a series the packaging apparatus recognizes a nucleotide sequence, called pac, on the DNA, and then condenses DNA within the coat protein shell unidirectionally from that point. DNA ends are generated near the pac site before or during the condensation reaction. The opposite end of the mature chromosome is created by a cut made in the DNA after a complete chromosome is condensed within the phage head. Subsequent packaging events on that concatemeric DNA begin at the end generated by the headful cut of the previous event and proceed in the same direction as the previous event. We report here the identification of a consensus nucleotide sequence for the pac site, and present evidence that supports the idea that the gene 3 protein is a central participant in this recognition event. In addition, we tentatively locate the portion of the gene 3 protein that contacts the pac site during the initiation of packaging.  相似文献   

3.
J B Petri  H Schmieger 《Gene》1990,88(1):47-55
Three PstI DNA fragments of the P22-related Salmonella phage, LP7, have been cloned. They contain sequences recognized as pac signals by the packaging apparatus of P22. One of these fragments corresponds to the P22 DNA fragment carrying gene 3 which comprises the pac signal of phage P22. The product of gene 3, Gp3, is involved in the recognition of pac and the packaging process. Gene 3 of LP7 and most of the adjacent gene 2 have been sequenced. The pac analogous segments of the other two PstI fragments have been narrowed down by subcloning and by transduction of the resulting hybrid plasmids under recombination-defective conditions.  相似文献   

4.
DNA packaging of Salmonella phage P22 starts at a defined site on a concatemer of P22 genomes. The molecular ends formed at the packaging initiation site (pac) map within a region of ca. 120 base pairs and may contain any of the four nucleotides at their 5' end. The determination of the positions of the cuts within the sequence demonstrates a characteristic distribution of cut sites which apparently cannot be attributed to the sequence organization of the involved regions. Symmetric elements of the sequence might serve as signals for a recognition event(s) at pac in a separate process preceding the cutting reaction. The region of packaging initiation is located within the sequence coding for gene 3. The 3 protein is responsible for the site specificity of this process. We find no significant homology to Nu1 protein, which appears to have an analogous or similar function in the DNA maturation of Escherichia coli phage lambda.  相似文献   

5.
Two crucial steps in the virus life cycle are genome encapsidation to form an infective virion and genome exit to infect the next host cell. In most icosahedral double-stranded (ds) DNA viruses, the viral genome enters and exits the capsid through a unique vertex. Internal membrane-containing viruses possess additional complexity as the genome must be translocated through the viral membrane bilayer. Here, we report the structure of the genome packaging complex with a membrane conduit essential for viral genome encapsidation in the tailless icosahedral membrane-containing bacteriophage PRD1. We utilize single particle electron cryo-microscopy (cryo-EM) and symmetry-free image reconstruction to determine structures of PRD1 virion, procapsid, and packaging deficient mutant particles. At the unique vertex of PRD1, the packaging complex replaces the regular 5-fold structure and crosses the lipid bilayer. These structures reveal that the packaging ATPase P9 and the packaging efficiency factor P6 form a dodecameric portal complex external to the membrane moiety, surrounded by ten major capsid protein P3 trimers. The viral transmembrane density at the special vertex is assigned to be a hexamer of heterodimer of proteins P20 and P22. The hexamer functions as a membrane conduit for the DNA and as a nucleating site for the unique vertex assembly. Our structures show a conformational alteration in the lipid membrane after the P9 and P6 are recruited to the virion. The P8-genome complex is then packaged into the procapsid through the unique vertex while the genome terminal protein P8 functions as a valve that closes the channel once the genome is inside. Comparing mature virion, procapsid, and mutant particle structures led us to propose an assembly pathway for the genome packaging apparatus in the PRD1 virion.  相似文献   

6.
The packaging of bacteriophage P1 DNA into viral capsids is initiated at a specific DNA site called pac. During packaging, that site is cleaved and at least one of the resulting ends is encapsidated into a P1 virion. We show here that pac is located on a 620 base-pair fragment of P1 DNA (EcoRI-20). When that fragment is inserted into the chromosome of cells that are then infected with P1, packaging of host DNA into phage particles is initiated at pac and proceeds down the chromosome, unidirectionally, for about five to ten P1 "headfuls" (about 5 X 10(5) to 10 X 10(5) bases of DNA). Using an assay for pac cleavage that does not depend on DNA packaging, we have identified a set of five amber mutations that are mapped adjacent to pac, and that define a gene (gene 9) essential for pac cleavage. Amber mutations that are located in genes necessary for viral capsid formation (genes 4, 8 and 23), or in a gene necessary for "late" protein synthesis (gene 10), do not affect pac cleavage. The latter result suggests that the synthesis of the pac cleavage protein is not regulated co-ordinately with other phage morphogenesis proteins. The products of pac cleavage were analyzed using two different DNA substrates. In one case, a single copy of pac was placed in the chromosome of P1-sensitive cells. When those cells were infected with P1, we could detect the cleavage of as much as 70% of the pac-containing DNA. The pac end destined to be packaged in the virion was detected five to 20 times more efficiently than was the other end. Since this result is obtained whether or not the infecting P1 phage can encapsidate the cut pac site, the differential detection of pac ends is not simply a consequence of one end being packaged and the other not. In a second case, pac was located in cells on a small (5 X 10(3) bases) multicopy plasmid. When those cells were infected with P1, neither pac end was detected efficiently after P1 infection, unless the cells carried a recBCD- mutation. In recBCD- cells, the results with plasmid-pac substrates were similar to those obtained with chromosomally integrated pac substrates. We interpret these results to mean that, following pac cleavage, the end destined to be packaged is protected from cellular nucleases while the other end is degraded by the action of at least two nucleases, one of which is the product of the host recBCD gene.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
Encapsidation of the DNA of the virulent Bacillus subtilis phage SPP1 follows a processive unidirectional headful-mechanism and initiates at a unique genomic location (pac). We have cloned a fragment of SPP1 DNA containing the pac site flanked by reporter genes into the chromosome of B. subtilis. Infection of such cells with SPP1 led to highly efficient packaging, initiated at the inserted pac site, of chromosomal DNA. The directionality in the packaging of this DNA was the same as observed with vegetative phage DNA. Mutagenizing the chromosomal pac insert defined an 83 base pair segment containing the pac cleavage site which is sufficient to direct phage specific DNA encapsidation. The packaging recognition signal as defined can also be utilized by the SPP1 related phages 41c, SF6 and rho 15.  相似文献   

8.
9.
The packaging of bacteriophage P1 DNA is initiated by cleavage of the viral DNA at a specific site, designated pac. The proteins necessary for that cleavage, and the genes that encode those proteins, are described in this report. By sequencing wild-type P1 DNA and DNA derived from various P1 amber mutants that are deficient in pac cleavage, two distinct genes, referred to as pacA and pacB, were identified. These genes appear to be coordinately transcribed with an upstream P1 gene that encodes a regulator of late P1 gene expression (gene 10). pacA is located upstream from pacB and contains the 161 base-pair pac cleavage site. The predicted sizes of the PacA and PacB proteins are 45 kDa and 56 kDa, respectively. These proteins have been identified on SDS-polyacrylamide gels using extracts derived from Escherichia coli cells that express these genes under the control of a bacteriophage T7 promoter. Extracts prepared from cells expressing both PacA and PacB are proficient for site-specific cleavage of the P1 packaging site, whereas those lacking either protein are not. However, the two defective extracts can complement each other to restore functional pac cleavage activity. Thus, PacA and PacB are two essential bacteriophage proteins required for recognition and cleavage of the P1 packaging site. PacB extracts also contain a second P1 protein that is encoded within the pacB gene. We have identified this protein on SDS-polyacrylamide gels and have shown that it is translated in the same reading frame as is PacB. Its role, if any, in pac cleavage is yet to be determined.  相似文献   

10.
A survey of DNA packaging in vivo and in vitro during infections caused by T4 DNA-delay and DNA-arrest amber mutants revealed a common DNA packaging-deficient phenotype. Electron microscopy revealed high proportions of proheads partially filled with DNA in vivo, indicating normal initiation but incomplete encapsidation. In contrast, exogenous mature T4 DNA was packaged in vitro by several early-gene mutant extracts. Detailed analysis of gene ts39 mutants (subunit of topoisomerase II) showed that in vivo packaging is defective, yet expression of late proteins appeared normal and the concatemeric DNA was not abnormally short or nicked. Although g39 amber mutant extracts packaged DNA in vitro, two of three ts39 mutant extracts prevented encapsidation of the exogenous DNA. The temperature-sensitive (ts) gp39 in a mutant topoisomerase II complex may have interfered with packaging in vivo and in vitro by interacting with DNA in an anomalous fashion, rendering it unfit for encapsidation. These results support the hypothesis that T4 DNA packaging is sensitive to DNA structure and discriminates against encapsidation of some types of defective DNA.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Hodge PD  Stow ND 《Journal of virology》2001,75(19):8977-8986
The cis-acting signals required for cleavage and encapsidation of the herpes simplex virus type 1 genome lie within the terminally redundant region or a sequence. The a sequence is flanked by short direct repeats (DR1) containing the site of cleavage, and quasi-unique regions, Uc and Ub, occupy positions adjacent to the genomic L and S termini, respectively, such that a novel fragment, Uc-DR1-Ub, is generated upon ligation of the genomic ends. The Uc-DR1-Ub fragment can function as a minimal packaging signal, and motifs have been identified within Uc and Ub that are conserved near the ends of other herpesvirus genomes (pac2 and pac1, respectively). We have introduced deletion and substitution mutations within the pac regions of the Uc-DR1-Ub fragment and assessed their effects on DNA packaging in an amplicon-based transient transfection assay. Within pac2, mutations affecting the T tract had the greatest inhibitory effect, but deletion of sequences on either side of this element also reduced packaging, suggesting that its position relative to other sequences within the Uc-DR1-Ub fragment is likely to be important. No single region essential for DNA packaging was detected within pac1. However, mutants lacking the G tracts on either side of the pac1 T-rich motif exhibited a reduced efficiency of serial propagation, and alteration of the sequences between DR1 and the pac1 T element also resulted in defective generation of Ub-containing terminal fragments. The data are consistent with a model in which initiation and termination of packaging are specified by sequences within Uc and Ub, respectively.  相似文献   

13.
The complex double-stranded DNA bacteriophages assemble DNA-free protein shells (procapsids) that subsequently package DNA. In the case of several double-stranded DNA bacteriophages, including P22, packaging is associated with cutting of DNA from the concatemeric molecule that results from replication. The mature intravirion P22 DNA has both non-unique (circularly permuted) ends and a length that is determined by the procapsid. In all known cases, procapsids consist of an outer coat protein, an interior scaffolding protein that assists in the assembly of the coat protein shell, and a ring of 12 identical portal protein subunits through which the DNA is presumed to enter the procapsid. To investigate the role of the portal protein in cutting permuted DNA from concatemers, we have characterized P22 portal protein mutants. The effects of several single amino acid changes in the P22 portal protein on the length of the DNA packaged, the density to which DNA is condensed within the virion, and the outer radius of the capsid have been determined. The results obtained with one mutant (NT5/1a) indicate no change (+/- 0.5%) in the radius of the capsid, but mature DNA that is 4.7% longer and a packing density that is commensurately higher than those of wild-type P22. Thus, the portal protein is part of the gauge that regulates the length and packaging density of DNA in bacteriophage P22. We argue that these findings make models for DNA packaging less likely in which the packing density is a property solely of the coat protein shell or of the DNA itself.  相似文献   

14.
Packaging of retroviral RNA is attained through the specific recognition of a cis-acting encapsidation site (located near the 5' end of the viral RNA) by components of the Gag precursor protein. Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) and simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) are two lentiviruses that lack apparent sequence similarity in their putative encapsidation regions. We used SIV vectors to determine whether HIV-1 particles can recognize the SIV encapsidation site and functionally propagate SIV nucleic acid. SIV nucleic acid was replicated by HIV-1 proteins. Thus, efficient lentivirus pseudotyping can take place at the RNA level. Direct examination of the RNA contents of virus particles indicated that encapsidation of this heterologous RNA is efficient. Characterization of deletion mutants in the untranslated leader region of SIV RNA indicates that only a very short region at the 5' end of the SIV RNA is needed for packaging. Comparison of this region with the corresponding region of HIV-1 reveals that both are marked by secondary structures that are likely to be similar. Thus, it is likely that a similar higher-order RNA structure is required for encapsidation.  相似文献   

15.
Bacteriophage with double-stranded, linear DNA genomes package DNA into pre-assembled icosahedral procapsids through a unique vertex. The packaging vertex contains an oligomeric ring of a portal protein that serves as a recognition site for the packaging enzymes, a conduit for DNA translocation, and the site of tail attachment. Previous studies have suggested that the portal protein of bacteriophage P22 is not essential for shell assembly; however, when assembled in the absence of functional portal protein, the assembled heads are not active in vitro packaging assays. In terms of head assembly, this raises an interesting question: how are portal vertices defined during morphogenesis if their incorporation is not a requirement for head assembly? To address this, the P22 portal gene was cloned into an inducible expression vector and transformed into the P22 host Salmonella typhimurium to allow control of the dosage of portal protein during infections. Using pulse-chase radiolabeling, it was determined that the portal protein is recruited into virion during head assembly. Surprisingly, over-expression of the portal protein during wild-type P22 infection caused a dramatic reduction in the yield of infectious virus. The cause of this reduction was traced to two potentially related phenomena. First, excess portal protein caused aberrant head assembly resulting in the formation of T=7 procapsid-like particles (PLPs) with twice the normal amount of portal protein. Second, maturation of the PLPs was blocked during DNA packaging resulting in the accumulation of empty PLPs within the host. In addition to PLPs with normal morphology, smaller heads (apparently T=4) and aberrant spirals were also produced. Interestingly, maturation of the small heads was relatively efficient resulting in the formation of small mature particles that were tailed and contained a head full of DNA. These data suggest that incorporation of portal vertices into heads occurs during growth of the coat lattice at decision points that dictate head assembly fidelity.  相似文献   

16.
Analysis in vivo of the bacteriophage P22 headful nuclease   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Bacteriophage P22 packages its double-stranded DNA chromosomes from concatemeric replicating DNA in a processive, sequential fashion. According to this model, during the initial packaging event in such a series the packaging apparatus recognizes a nucleotide sequence, called pac, on the DNA, and then condenses DNA within the coat protein shell unidirectionally (rightward) from that point. DNA ends are generated near the pac site before or during the condensation reaction. The right end of the mature chromosome is created by a cut made in the DNA by the "headful nuclease" after a complete chromosome is condensed within the phage head. Subsequent packaging events on that concatemeric DNA begin at the end generated by the headful cut of the previous event and proceed in the same direction as the previous event. We report here accurate measurements of the P22 chromosome length (43,400( +/- 750) base-pairs, where the uncertainty is the range in observed lengths), genome length (41,830( +/- 315) base-pairs, where the uncertainty represents the accuracy with which the length is known), the terminal redundancy (1600( +/- 750) base-pairs or 3.8( +/- 1.8)%, where the uncertainty is the observed range) and the imprecision in the headful measuring device ( +/- 750 base-pairs or +/- 1.7%). In addition, we present evidence for a weak nucleotide sequence specificity in the headful nuclease. These findings lend further support to, and extend our understanding of, the sequential series model of P22 DNA packaging.  相似文献   

17.
18.
On the sequential packaging of bacteriophage P22 DNA.   总被引:4,自引:1,他引:3  
Bacteriophage P22 is thought to package daughter chromosomes serially along concatemeric DNA. We present experiments which show that the average DNA packaging series length increases with time after infection, which supports this model. In addition, we have analyzed the effect on average series length of lowering the amount of the various individual proteins involved in DNA packaging. These results support the notion that the protein products of gene 2 and gene 3 are both more stringently required for initiation of sequential DNA packaging series than for their extension, and they are compatible with a model for the control of series length in which that length is determined, at least in part, by a competition between series initiation events and extension events.  相似文献   

19.
PY100 is a lytic bacteriophage with a broad host range within the genus Yersinia. The phage forms plaques on strains of the three human pathogenic species Yersinia enterocolitica, Y. pseudotuberculosis, and Y. pestis at 37°C. PY100 was isolated from farm manure and intended to be used in phage therapy trials. PY100 has an icosahedral capsid containing double-stranded DNA and a contractile tail. The genome consists of 50,291 bp and is predicted to contain 93 open reading frames (ORFs). PY100 gene products were found to be homologous to the capsid proteins and proteins involved in DNA metabolism of the enterobacterial phage T1; PY100 tail proteins possess homologies to putative tail proteins of phage AaΦ23 of Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans. In a proteome analysis of virion particles, 15 proteins of the head and tail structures were identified by mass spectrometry. The putative gene product of ORF2 of PY100 shows significant homology to the gene 3 product (small terminase subunit) of Salmonella phage P22 that is involved in packaging of the concatemeric phage DNA. The packaging mechanism of PY100 was analyzed by hybridization and sequence analysis of DNA isolated from virion particles. Newly replicated PY100 DNA is cut initially at a pac recognition site, which is located in the coding region of ORF2.  相似文献   

20.
D. Cue  M. Feiss 《Genetics》1997,147(1):7-17
Packaging a phage λ chromosome involves cutting the chromosome from a concatemer and translocating the DNA into a prohead. The cutting site, cos, consists of three subsites: cosN, the nicking site; cosB, a site required for packaging initiation; and cosQ, a site required for termination of packaging. cosB contains three binding sites (R sequences) for gpNu1, the small subunit of terminase. Because cosQ has sequence identity to the R sequences, it has been proposed that cosQ is also recognized by gpNu1. Suppressors of cosB mutations were unable to suppress a cosQ point mutation. Suppressors of a cosQ mutation (cosQ1) were isolated and found to be of three sorts, the first affecting a base pair in cosQ. The second type of cosQ suppression involved increasing the length of the phage chromosome to a length near to the maximum capacity of the head shell. A third class of suppressors were missense mutations in gene B, which encodes the portal protein of the virion. It is speculated that increasing DNA length and altering the portal protein may reduce the rate of translocation, thereby increasing the efficiency of recognition of the mutant cosQ. None of the cosQ suppressors was able to suppress cosB mutations. Because cosQ and cosB mutations are suppressed by very different types of suppressors, it is concluded that cosQ and the R sequences of cosB are recognized by different DNA-binding determinants.  相似文献   

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