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1.
We examine in vivo ejection of noncondensed DNA from tailed bacteriophages into bacteria. The ejection is dominantly governed by the physical conditions in the bacteria. The confinement of the DNA in the virus capsid only slightly helps the ejection, becoming completely irrelevant during its last stages. A simple calculation based on the premise of condensed DNA in the cell enables us to estimate the maximal bacterial turgor pressure against which the ejection can still be fully realized. The calculated pressure (∼5 atm) shows that the ejection of DNA into Gram-negative bacteria could proceed spontaneously, i.e., without the need to invoke active mechanisms.  相似文献   

2.
Tailed bacteriophage particles carry DNA highly pressurized inside the capsid. Challenge with their receptor promotes release of viral DNA. We show that addition of the osmolyte polyethylene glycol (PEG) has two distinct effects in bacteriophage SPP1 DNA ejection. One effect is to inhibit the trigger for DNA ejection. The other effect is to exert an osmotic pressure that controls the extent of DNA released in phages that initiate ejection. We carried out independent measurements of each effect, which is an essential requirement for their quantitative study. The fraction of phages that do not eject increased linearly with the external osmotic pressure. In the remaining phage particles ejection stopped after a defined amount of DNA was reached inside the capsid. Direct measurement of the size of non-ejected DNA by gel electrophoresis at different PEG concentrations in the latter sub-population allowed determination of the external osmotic pressure that balances the force powering DNA exit (47 atm for SPP1 wild-type). DNA exit stops when the ejection force mainly due to repulsion between DNA strands inside the SPP1 capsid equalizes the force resisting DNA insertion into the PEG solution. Considering the turgor pressure in the Bacillus subtilis cytoplasm the energy stored in the tight phage DNA packing is only sufficient to power entry of the first 17% of the SPP1 chromosome into the cell, the remaining 83% requiring application of additional force for internalization.  相似文献   

3.
The transfer of the bacteriophage genome from the capsid into the host cell is a key step of the infectious process. In bacteriophage T5, DNA ejection can be triggered in vitro by simple binding of the phage to its purified Escherichia coli receptor FhuA. Using electrophoresis and cryo-electron microscopy, we measure the extent of DNA ejection as a function of the external osmotic pressure. In the high pressure range (7-16 atm), the amount of DNA ejected decreases with increasing pressure, as theoretically predicted and observed for λ and SPP1 bacteriophages. In the low and moderate pressure range (2-7 atm), T5 exhibits an unexpected behavior. Instead of a unique ejected length, multiple populations coexist. Some phages eject their complete genome, whereas others stop at some nonrandom states that do not depend on the applied pressure. We show that contrarily to what is observed for the phages SPP1 and λ, T5 ejection cannot be explained as resulting from a simple pressure equilibrium between the inside and outside of the capsid. Kinetics parameters and/or structural characteristics of the ejection machinery could play a determinant role in T5 DNA ejection.  相似文献   

4.
Bacteriophages, phages for short, are viruses of bacteria. The majority of phages contain a double-stranded DNA genome packaged in a capsid at a density of ~500 mg ml(-1). This high density requires substantial compression of the normal B-form helix, leading to the conjecture that DNA in mature phage virions is under significant pressure, and that pressure is used to eject the DNA during infection. A large number of theoretical, computer simulation and in vitro experimental studies surrounding this conjecture have revealed many--though often isolated and/or contradictory--aspects of packaged DNA. This prompts us to present a unified view of the statistical physics and thermodynamics of DNA packaged in phage capsids. We argue that the DNA in a mature phage is in a (meta)stable state, wherein electrostatic self-repulsion is balanced by curvature stress due to confinement in the capsid. We show that in addition to the osmotic pressure associated with the packaged DNA and its counterions, there are four different pressures within the capsid: pressure on the DNA, hydrostatic pressure, the pressure experienced by the capsid and the pressure associated with the chemical potential of DNA ejection. Significantly, we analyze the mechanism of force transmission in the packaged DNA and demonstrate that the pressure on DNA is not important for ejection. We derive equations showing a strong hydrostatic pressure difference across the capsid shell. We propose that when a phage is triggered to eject by interaction with its receptor in vitro, the (thermodynamic) incentive of water molecules to enter the phage capsid flushes the DNA out of the capsid. In vivo, the difference between the osmotic pressures in the bacterial cell cytoplasm and the culture medium similarly results in a water flow that drags the DNA out of the capsid and into the bacterial cell.  相似文献   

5.
Recent in vitro experiments have shown that DNA ejection from bacteriophage can be partially stopped by surrounding osmotic pressure when ejected DNA is digested by DNase I in the course of ejection. In this work, we argue by a combination of experimental techniques (osmotic suppression without DNase I monitored by UV absorbance, pulse-field electrophoresis, and cryo-transmission electron microscopy visualization) and simple scaling modeling that intact genome (i.e., undigested) ejection in a crowded environment is, on the contrary, enhanced or eventually complete with the help of a pulling force resulting from DNA condensation induced by the osmotic stress itself. This demonstrates that in vivo, the osmotically stressed cell cytoplasm will promote phage DNA ejection rather than resist it. The further addition of DNA-binding proteins under crowding conditions is shown to enhance the extent of ejection. We also found some optimal crowding conditions for which DNA content remaining in the capsid upon ejection is maximum, which correlates well with the optimal conditions of maximum DNA packaging efficiency into viral capsids observed almost 20 years ago. Biological consequences of this finding are discussed.  相似文献   

6.
Is phage DNA 'injected' into cells--biologists and physicists can agree   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The double-stranded DNA inside bacteriophages is packaged at a density of approximately 500 mg/ml and exerts an osmotic pressure of tens of atmospheres. This pressure is commonly assumed to cause genome ejection during infection. Indeed, by the addition of their natural receptors, some phages can be induced in vitro to completely expel their genome from the virion. However, the osmotic pressure of the bacterial cytoplasm exerts an opposing force, making it impossible for the pressure of packaged DNA to cause complete genome ejection in vivo. Various processes for complete genome ejection are discussed, but we focus on a novel proposal suggesting that the osmotic gradient between the extracellular environment and the cytoplasm results in fluid flow through the phage virion at the initiation of infection. The phage genome is thereby sucked into the cell by hydrodynamic drag.  相似文献   

7.
We studied the control parameters that govern the dynamics of in vitro DNA ejection in bacteriophage λ. Previous work demonstrated that bacteriophage DNA is highly pressurized, and this pressure has been hypothesized to help drive DNA ejection. Ions influence this process by screening charges on DNA; however, a systematic variation of salt concentrations to explore these effects has not been undertaken. To study the nature of the forces driving DNA ejection, we performed in vitro measurements of DNA ejection in bulk and at the single-phage level. We present measurements on the dynamics of ejection and on the self-repulsion force driving ejection. We examine the role of ion concentration and identity in both measurements, and show that the charge of counterions is an important control parameter. These measurements show that the mobility of ejecting DNA is independent of ionic concentrations for a given amount of DNA in the capsid. We also present evidence that phage DNA forms loops during ejection, and confirm that this effect occurs using optical tweezers.  相似文献   

8.
All tailed bacteriophages follow the same general scheme of infection: they bind to their specific host receptor and then transfer their genome into the bacterium. DNA translocation is thought to be initiated by the strong pressure due to DNA packing inside the capsid. However, the exact mechanism by which each phage controls its DNA ejection remains unknown. Using light scattering, we analyzed the kinetics of in vitro DNA release from phages SPP1 and λ (Siphoviridae family) and found a simple exponential decay. The ejection characteristic time was studied as a function of the temperature and found to follow an Arrhenius law, allowing us to determine the activation energy that governs DNA ejection. A value of 25-30 kcal/mol is obtained for SPP1 and λ, comparable to the one measured in vitro for T5 (Siphoviridae) and in vivo for T7 (Podoviridae). This suggests similar mechanisms of DNA ejection control. In all tailed phages, the opening of the connector-tail channel is needed for DNA release and could constitute the limiting step. The common value of the activation energy likely reflects the existence for all phages of an optimum value, ensuring a compromise between efficient DNA delivery and high stability of the virus.  相似文献   

9.
Most bacteriophages are known to inject their double-stranded DNA into bacteria upon receptor binding in an essentially spontaneous way. This downhill thermodynamic process from the intact virion to the empty viral capsid plus released DNA is made possible by the energy stored during active packaging of the genome into the capsid. Only indirect measurements of this energy have been available until now, using either single-molecule or osmotic suppression techniques. In this work, we describe for the first time the use of isothermal titration calorimetry to directly measure the heat released (or, equivalently, the enthalpy) during DNA ejection from phage λ, triggered in solution by a solubilized receptor. Quantitative analyses of the results lead to the identification of thermodynamic determinants associated with DNA ejection. The values obtained were found to be consistent with those previously predicted by analytical models and numerical simulations. Moreover, the results confirm the role of DNA hydration in the energetics of genome confinement in viral capsids.  相似文献   

10.
Double-stranded DNA bacteriophage genomes are packaged into their icosahedral capsids at the highest densities known so far (about 50 % w:v). How the molecule is folded at such density and how its conformation changes upon ejection or packaging are fascinating questions still largely open. We review cryo-TEM analyses of DNA conformation inside partially filled capsids as a function of the physico-chemical environment (ions, osmotic pressure, temperature). We show that there exists a wide variety of DNA conformations. Strikingly, the different observed structures can be described by some of the different models proposed over the years for DNA organisation inside bacteriophage capsids: either spool-like structures with axial or concentric symmetries, or liquid crystalline structures characterised by a DNA homogeneous density. The relevance of these conformations for the understanding of DNA folding and unfolding upon ejection and packaging in vivo is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
Recent work has shown that pressures inside dsDNA phage capsids can be as high as many tens of atmospheres; it is this pressure that is responsible for initiation of the delivery of phage genomes to host cells. The forces driving ejection of the genome have been shown to decrease monotonically as ejection proceeds, and hence to be strongly dependent on the genome length. Here we investigate the effects of ambient salts on the pressures inside phage-λ, for the cases of mono-, di-, and tetravalent cations, and measure how the extent of ejection against a fixed osmotic pressure (mimicking the bacterial cytoplasm) varies with cation concentration. We find, for example, that the ejection fraction is halved in 30 mM Mg2+ and is decreased by a factor of 10 upon addition of 1 mM spermine. These effects are calculated from a simple model of genome packaging, using DNA-DNA repulsion energies as determined independently from x-ray diffraction measurements on bulk DNA solutions. By comparing the measured ejection fractions with values implied from the bulk DNA solution data, we predict that the bending energy makes the d-spacings inside the capsid larger than those for bulk DNA at the same osmotic pressure.  相似文献   

12.
The translocation of genetic material from the viral capsid to the cell is an essential part of the viral infection process. Whether the energetics of this process is driven by the energy stored within the confined nucleic acid or cellular processes pull the genome into the cell has been the subject of discussion. However, in vitro studies of genome ejection have been limited to a few head-tailed bacteriophages with a double-stranded DNA genome. Here we describe a DNA release system that operates in an archaeal virus. This virus infects an archaeon Haloarcula hispanica that was isolated from a hypersaline environment. The DNA-ejection velocity of His1, determined by single-molecule experiments, is comparable to that of bacterial viruses. We found that the ejection process is modulated by the external osmotic pressure (polyethylene glycol (PEG)) and by increased ion (Mg2+ and Na+) concentration. The observed ejection was unidirectional, randomly paused, and incomplete, which suggests that cellular processes are required to complete the DNA transfer.  相似文献   

13.
Infection by tailed dsDNA phages is initiated by release of the viral DNA from the capsid and its polarized injection into the host. The driving force for the genome transport remains poorly defined. Among many hypothesis [1], it has been proposed that the internal pressure built up during packaging of the DNA in the capsid is responsible for its injection [2-4]. Whether the energy stored during packaging is sufficient to cause full DNA ejection or only to initiate the process was tested on phage T5 whose DNA (121,400 bp) can be released in vitro by mere interaction of the phage with its E. coli membrane receptor FhuA [5-7]. We present a fluorescence microscopy study investigating in real time the dynamics of DNA ejection from single T5 phages adsorbed onto a microfluidic cell. The ejected DNA was fluorescently stained, and its length was measured at different stages of the ejection after being stretched in a hydrodynamic flow. We conclude that DNA release is not an all-or-none process but occurs in a stepwise fashion and at a rate reaching 75,000 bp/sec. The relevance of this stepwise ejection to the in vivo DNA transfer is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
According to the obtained experimental results, the thermal shock (from 37 to 53 °C) not only stops the multiplication process of Escherichia coli bacteria, but also causes bacterial titer to decrease gradually. After this period lasting up to 1 hour, the bacterial cells continue to grow. A similar type of response was observed when bacteria were subjected to acid shock. Increasing acidity of media leads to decrease of bacterial growth process, and finally, their titer curve sharply falls over time. Also, interesting results were obtained about necessary conditions for infecting the bacteria by phages. Particularly, DNA injection from phages into bacterial cells requires most of corresponding bacterial membrane receptors to be occupied by phages. We suppose that this occurs due to autocrine phenomenon when the signaling molecules block the DNA ejection from phage particles. This effect lasts until a certain number of phage particles are attached to the membrane. After that, DNA injection from phage head into the cytoplasm takes place and the process of bacterial infection begins. The real number of phages in a stock is by several orders higher than the number of plaque-forming units in a given stock, which is determined by a classical double-layer agar method.  相似文献   

15.
The effect of external osmotic pressure on the extent of DNA ejection from bacteriophage-lambda was recently investigated (Evilevitch et al., 2003). The total length of DNA ejected was measured via the 260-nm absorption by free nucleotides, after opening of the capsids in the presence of varying amounts of polyethylene glycol 8000 and DNase I. As a function of osmolyte concentration, this absorption was shown to decrease progressively, ultimately vanishing completely for a sufficiently high external osmotic pressure. In this work we report the results of both sedimentation and gel analysis of the length of DNA remaining inside the capsids, as a function of osmolyte concentration. It is confirmed in this way that the progressive inhibition of DNA ejection corresponds to partial ejection from all of the capsids.  相似文献   

16.
A remarkable property of bacteriophages is their capacity to encapsidate large amounts of DNA during morphogenesis and to maintain their genome in the capsid in a very stable form even under extreme conditions. Even as remarkable is the efficiency with which their genome is ejected from the phage particle and transferred into the host bacteria. Biophysical techniques have led to significant progresses in characterizing these mechanisms. The molecular motor of encapsidation of several phages as well as the organization of viral capsids have been described at atomic resolution. Cryo-electron microscopy and fluorescence microscopy have permitted to describe DNA ejection at the level of single phage particles. Theoretical models of encapsidation and ejection have been proposed that can be confronted to experimental data. This review will present the state of the art on the recent advances brought by biophysics in this field. Reference will be given to the work performed on double-stranded DNA phages and on one of its representative, phage T5, our working model.  相似文献   

17.
Ejection of the genome from the virus, phage λ, is the initial step in the infection of its host bacterium. In vitro, the ejection depends sensitively on internal pressure within the virus capsid; however, the in vivo effect of internal pressure on infection of bacteria is unknown. Here, we use microfluidics to monitor individual cells and determine the temporal distribution of lysis due to infection as the capsid pressure is varied. The lysis probability decreases markedly with decreased capsid pressure. Of interest, the average lysis times remain the same but the distribution is broadened as the pressure is lowered.  相似文献   

18.
Initial attachment of bacteriophage P22 to the Salmonella host cell is known to be mediated by interactions between lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and the phage tailspike proteins (TSP), but the events that subsequently lead to DNA injection into the bacterium are unknown. We used the binding of a fluorescent dye and DNA accessibility to DNase and restriction enzymes to analyze DNA ejection from phage particles in vitro. Ejection was specifically triggered by aggregates of purified Salmonella LPS but not by LPS with different O-antigen structure, by lipid A, phospholipids, or soluble O-antigen polysaccharide. This suggests that P22 does not use a secondary receptor at the bacterial outer membrane surface. Using phage particles reconstituted with purified mutant TSP in vitro, we found that the endorhamnosidase activity of TSP degrading the O-antigen polysaccharide was required prior to DNA ejection in vitro and DNA replication in vivo. If, however, LPS was pre-digested with soluble TSP, it was no longer able to trigger DNA ejection, even though it still contained five O-antigen oligosaccharide repeats. Together with known data on the structure of LPS and phage P22, our results suggest a molecular model. In this model, tailspikes position the phage particles on the outer membrane surface for DNA ejection. They force gp26, the central needle and plug protein of the phage tail machine, through the core oligosaccharide layer and into the hydrophobic portion of the outer membrane, leading to refolding of the gp26 lazo-domain, release of the plug, and ejection of DNA and pilot proteins.  相似文献   

19.
Genome packaging and delivery are fundamental steps in the replication cycle of all viruses. Icosahedral viruses with linear double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) usually package their genome into a preformed, rigid procapsid using the power generated by a virus-encoded packaging ATPase. The pressure and stored energy due to this confinement of DNA at a high density is assumed to drive the initial stages of genome ejection. Membrane-containing icosahedral viruses, such as bacteriophage PRD1, present an additional architectural complexity by enclosing their genome within an internal membrane vesicle. Upon adsorption to a host cell, the PRD1 membrane remodels into a proteo-lipidic tube that provides a conduit for passage of the ejected linear dsDNA through the cell envelope. Based on volume analyses of PRD1 membrane vesicles captured by cryo-electron tomography and modeling of the elastic properties of the vesicle, we propose that the internal membrane makes a crucial and active contribution during infection by maintaining the driving force for DNA ejection and countering the internal turgor pressure of the host. These novel functions extend the role of the PRD1 viral membrane beyond tube formation or the mere physical confinement of the genome. The presence and assistance of an internal membrane might constitute a biological advantage that extends also to other viruses that package their linear dsDNA to high density within an internal vesicle.  相似文献   

20.
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   

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