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1.
The filamentous phage Ff (f1, fd, or M13) of Escherichia coli is assembled at the cell membranes by a process that is morphologically similar to that of pilus assembly. The release of the filament virion is mediated by excision from the membrane; conversely, entry into a host cell is mediated by insertion of the virion coat proteins into the membrane. The N-terminal domains of the minor virion protein pIII have the sole role of binding to host receptors during infection. In contrast, the C domain of pIII is required for two opposite functions: insertion of the virion into the membrane during infection and excision at the termination step of assembly/secretion. We identified a 28-residue-long segment in the pIII C domain, which is required for phage entry but dispensable for release from the membrane at the end of assembly. This segment, which we named the infection-competence segment (ICS), works only in cis with the N-terminal receptor-binding domains and does not require the equivalent ICS sequences in other subunits within the virion cap. The ICS contains a predicted amphipathic α-helix and is rich in small amino acids, Gly, Ala, and Ser, which are arranged as a [small]XXX[small]XX[small]XXX[small]XXX[small] motif. Scanning Ala/Gly mutagenesis of ICS showed that small residues are compatible with infection. Overall, organization of the C domain is reminiscent of α-helical pore-forming toxins' membrane insertion domains. The unique ability of pIII to mediate both membrane insertion and excision allowed us to compare these two fundamental membrane transactions and to show that receptor-triggered insertion is a more complex process than excision from membranes.  相似文献   

2.
Bacteriophage PRD1 shares many structural and functional similarities with adenovirus. A major difference is the PRD1 internal membrane, which acts in concert with vertex proteins to translocate the phage genome into the host. Multiresolution models of the PRD1 capsid, together with genetic analyses, provide fine details of the molecular interactions associated with particle stability and membrane dynamics. The N- and C-termini of the major coat protein (P3), which are required for capsid assembly, act as conformational switches bridging capsid to membrane and linking P3 trimers. Electrostatic P3-membrane interactions increase virion stability upon DNA packaging. Newly revealed proteins suggest how the metastable vertex works and how the capsid edges are stabilized.  相似文献   

3.
The M13 filamentous bacteriophage coat is a symmetric array of several thousand alpha-helical major coat proteins (P8) that surround the DNA core. P8 molecules initially reside in the host membrane and subsequently transition into their role as coat proteins during the phage assembly process. A comprehensive mutational analysis of the 50-residue P8 sequence revealed that only a small subset of the side-chains were necessary for efficient incorporation into a wild-type (wt) coat. In the three-dimensional structure of P8, these side-chains cluster into three functional epitopes: a hydrophobic epitope located near the N terminus and two epitopes (one hydrophobic and the other basic) located near the C terminus on opposite faces of the helix. The results support a model for assembly in which the incorporation of P8 is mediated by intermolecular interactions involving these functional epitopes. In this model, the N-terminal hydrophobic epitope docks with P8 molecules already assembled into the phage particle in the periplasm, and the basic epitope interacts with the acidic DNA backbone in the cytoplasm. These interactions could facilitate the transition of P8 from the membrane into the assembling phage, and the incorporation of a single P8 would be completed by the docking of additional P8 molecules with the second hydrophobic epitope at the C terminus. We constructed a minimized P8 that contained only nine non-Ala side-chains yet retained all three functional epitopes. The minimized P8 assembled into the wt coat almost as efficiently as wt P8, thus defining the minimum requirements for protein incorporation into the filamentous phage coat. The results suggest possible mechanisms of natural viral evolution and establish guidelines for the artificial evolution of improved coat proteins for phage display technology.  相似文献   

4.
The gene 3 coding for one minor coat protein (adsorption protein) of phage IKe was cloned into an expression plasmid and overproduced. The presence of a promoter for this gene could be demonstrated as well as the incorporation of the IKe gene 3 protein (g3p) into the cytoplasmic membrane of host cells. When 110 carboxy-terminal amino acids were deleted, the truncated protein was translocated across the cytoplasmic membrane into the periplasm. Thus the deleted amino acids bear a membrane anchor domain. In contrast to the partly homologous g3p of the Ff phages, IKe g3p did not alter the membrane properties of its host. IKe g3p was not incorporated into Ff phage particles in amounts detectable by our assays although the presence of IKe g3p may affect the efficiency of Ff phage production. The existence of a structural feature necessary for the specific recognition of the respective g3p during phage assembly is deduced.  相似文献   

5.
P16 is a virion protein and, as such, is incorporated into the phage head as a step in morphogenesis. The role of P16 in assembly is not essential since particles are formed without this protein which appear normal by electron microscopy. P16 is essential when the particle infects a cell in the following cycle of infection. In the absence of functional P16, the infection does not appear to proceed beyond release of phage DNA from the capsid. No known genes are expressed, no DNA is transcribed, and the host cell survives the infection, continuing to grow and divide normally. The P16 function is required only during infection for the expression of phage functions. Induction in the absence of P16 proceeds with the expression of early and late genes and results in particle formation. P16 must be incorporated during morphogenesis into progeny particles after both infection and induction for the progeny to be infectious. The P16 function is necessary for transduction as well as for infection. Its activity is independent of new protein synthesis and it is not under immunity control. P16 can act in trans, but appears to act preferentially on the phage or phage DNA with which it is packaged. The data from complementation studies are compatible with P16 release from the capsid with the phage DNA. In the absence of P16 the infection is blocked, but the phage genome is not degraded. The various roles which have been ruled out for P16 are: (i) an early regulatory function, (ii) an enzymatic activity necessary for phage production, (iii) protection of phage DNA from host degradation enzymes, (iv) any generalized alteration of the host cell, (v) binding parental DNA to the replication complex, and (vi) any direct involvement in the replication of P22 DNA. P16 can be responsible for: (i) complete release of the DNA and disengagement from the capsid, (ii) bringing the released DNA to some necessary cell site or compartment such as the cytoplasm, (iii) removal of other virion proteins from the injected DNA, and (iv) alterations of the structure of the injected DNA.  相似文献   

6.
The lipid-containing bacteriophage PRD1 infects a variety of gram-negative cells by injecting its linear double-stranded DNA genome into the host cell cytoplasm, while the protein capsid is left outside. The virus membrane and several structural proteins are involved in phage DNA entry. In this work we identified a new infectivity protein of PRD1. Disruption of gene XXXII resulted in a mutant phenotype defective in phage reproduction. The absence of the protein P32 did not compromise the particle assembly but led to a defect in phage DNA injection. In P32-deficient particles the phage membrane is unable to undergo a structural transformation from a spherical to a tubular form. Since P32(-) particles are able to increase the permeability of the host cell envelope to a degree comparable to that found with wild-type particles, we suggest that the tail-tube formation is needed to eject the DNA from the phage particle rather than to reach the host cell interior.  相似文献   

7.
Filamentous bacteriophages are interesting paradigms in structural molecular biology, in part because of the unusual mechanism of filamentous phage assembly. During assembly, several thousand copies of an intracellular DNA-binding protein bind to each copy of the replicating phage DNA, and are then displaced by membrane-spanning phage coat proteins as the nascent phage is extruded through the bacterial plasma membrane. This complicated process takes place without killing the host bacterium.  相似文献   

8.
Protein III (pIII) of filamentous phage is required for both the beginning and the end of the phage life cycle. The infection starts by binding of the N-terminal N2 and N1 domains to the primary and secondary host receptors, F pilus and TolA protein, respectively, whereas the life cycle terminates by the C-terminal domain-mediated release of the membrane-anchored virion from the cell. It has been assumed that the role of the C-terminal domain of pIII in the infection is that of a tether for the receptor-binding domains N1N2 to the main body of the virion. In a poorly understood process that follows receptor binding, the virion disassembles as its protein(s) become integrated into the host inner membrane, resulting in the phage genome entry into the bacterial cytoplasm. To begin revealing the mechanism of this process, we showed that tethering the functional N1N2 receptor-binding domain to the virion via termination-incompetent C domain abolishes infection. This infection defect cannot be complemented by in trans supply of the functional C domain. Therefore, the C domain of pIII acts in concert with the receptor-binding domains to mediate the post receptor binding events in the infection. Based on these findings, we propose a model in which binding of the N1 domain to the periplasmic portion of TolA, the secondary receptor, triggers in cis a conformational change in the C domain, and that this change opens or unlocks the pIII end of the virion, allowing the entry phase of infection to proceed. To our knowledge, this is the first virus that uses the same protein domain both for the insertion into and release from the host membrane.  相似文献   

9.
Conditional lethal YidC mutants have been isolated to decipher the role of YidC in the assembly of Sec-dependent and Sec-independent membrane proteins. We now show that the membrane insertion of the Sec-independent M13 procoat-lep protein is inhibited in a short time in a temperature-sensitive mutant when shifted to the nonpermissive temperature. This provides an additional line of evidence that YidC plays a direct role in the insertion of the Sec-independent M13 procoat protein. However, in the temperature-sensitive mutant, the insertion of the Sec-independent Pf3 phage coat protein and the Sec-dependent leader peptidase were not strongly inhibited at the restricted temperatures. Conversely, using a cold-sensitive YidC strain, we find that the membrane insertion of the Sec-independent Pf3 coat protein is blocked, and the Sec-dependent leader peptidase is inhibited at the nonpermissive temperature, whereas the insertion of the M13 procoat protein is nearly normal. These data show that the YidC function for procoat and its function for Pf3 coat and possibly leader peptidase are genetically separable and suggest that the YidC structural requirements are different for the Sec-independent M13 procoat and Pf3 coat phage proteins that insert by different mechanisms.  相似文献   

10.
Filamentous phage assemble at the membrane of infected cells. The phage filament is released from the membrane at the end of assembly, after four to five copies of the minor proteins, pIII and pVI, have been added to the end of the virion. In the absence of pIII or pVI, phage filaments are not released, but remain associated with the cells. The C-terminal portion of pIII, termed the "C" domain, is required for the release of stable virions.With the use of pIII C-terminal fragments of increasing size, termination of assembly can be divided into various steps. An 83-residue fragment leads to the incorporation of pVI into the assembling phage, but does not release it from the membrane. A slightly longer fragment (93 residues) is sufficient to release the particle into the culture supernatant. However, these released particles are unstable in the detergent, sarkosyl, which does not disrupt wild-type phage. A fragment of >121 residues is needed for the particle to become detergent resistant. Thus, the C-domain can be divided into two subdomains: C2, sufficient for release, and C1, required for virion stability.A model for termination of phage assembly is proposed in which pIII and pVI dock to the membrane-associated filament and form a pre- termination complex. Then, a conformational change involving the C2 domain of pIII disrupts the hydrophobic interactions with the inner membrane, releasing the phage from the cells. The pIII-mediated release of phage from the membranes points to one possible mechanism for excision of membrane-anchored protein complexes from lipid bilayers.  相似文献   

11.
Bacteriophage f1 Infection: Fate of the Parental Major Coat Protein   总被引:14,自引:4,他引:10       下载免费PDF全文
The major coat protein of infecting f1 phage is incorporated into the inner membrane of the host cell, even in the absence of phage f1DNA penetration and replication. The major coat protein monomers are reutilized in the assembly of new phage. They are not conserved as a single unit but behave as independent units which are slowly incorporated into newly manufactured phage.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
A peptide was fused to the C terminus of the M13 bacteriophage major coat protein (P8), and libraries of P8 mutants were screened to select for variants that displayed the peptide with high efficiency. Over 600 variants were sequenced to compile a comprehensive database of P8 sequence diversity compatible with assembly into the wild-type phage coat. The database reveals that, while the alpha-helical P8 molecule was highly tolerant to mutations, certain functional epitopes were required for efficient incorporation. Three hydrophobic epitopes were located approximately equidistantly along the length of the alpha-helix. In addition, a positively charged epitope was required directly opposite the most C-terminal hydrophobic epitope and on the same side as the other two epitopes. Both ends of the protein were highly tolerant to mutations, consistent with the use of P8 as a scaffold for both N and C-terminal phage display. Further rounds of selection were used to enrich for P8 variants that supported higher levels of C-terminal peptide display. The largest improvements in display resulted from mutations around the junction between P8 and the C-terminal linker, and additional mutations in the N-terminal region were selected for further improvements in display. The best P8 variants improved C-terminal display more than 100-fold relative to the wild-type, and these variants could support the simultaneous display of N and C-terminal fusions. These finding provide information on the requirements for filamentous phage coat assembly, and provide improved scaffolds for phage display technology.  相似文献   

14.
The major coat protein of the bacteriophage f1 is synthesized during infection of Escherichia coli and becomes tightly associated with the host membrane. This synthesis was studied in conjunction with the strain BB26-36, a mutant defective in phospholipid synthesis, to investigate basic questions concerning membrane protein and phospholipid synthesis. Coat protein synthesis is decreased in the absence of net phospholipid synthesis. The coat protein produced under these conditions is still found tightly associated with the membrane. Resumption of phospholipid synthesis leads to an increase in the synthesis and accumulation of the coat protein. Therefore, a correlation between coat protein and phospholipid synthesis seems to exist. However, the packaging of phage deoxyribonucleic acid into phage particles proceeds in the absence of phospholipid synthesis, and the number of phage particles produced appears to depend only on the amount of coat protein in the membrane.  相似文献   

15.
The first step in phage infection is the recognition of, and adsorption to, a receptor located on the host cell surface. This reversible host adsorption step is commonly followed by an irreversible event, which involves phage DNA delivery or release into the bacterial cytoplasm. The molecular components that trigger this latter event are unknown for most phages of Gram-positive bacteria. In the current study, we present a comparative genome analysis of three mutants of Lactococcus cremoris 3107, which are resistant to the P335 group phage TP901-1 due to mutations that affect TP901-1 DNA release. Through genetic complementation and phage infection assays, a predicted lactococcal three-component glycosylation system (TGS) was shown to be required for TP901-1 infection. Major cell wall saccharidic components were analysed, but no differences were found. However, heterologous gene expression experiments indicate that this TGS is involved in the glucosylation of a cell envelope-associated component that triggers TP901-1 DNA release. To date, a saccharide modification has not been implicated in the DNA delivery process of a Gram-positive infecting phage.  相似文献   

16.
《Gene》1997,192(1):23-32
Biogenesis of both filamentous phage and type-IV pili involves the assembly of many copies of a small, integral inner membrane protein (the phage major coat protein or pilin) into a helical, tubular array that passes through the outer membrane. The occurrence of related proteins required for assembly and export in both systems suggests that there may be similarities at the mechanistic level as well. This report summarizes the properties of filamentous phage and the proteins required for their assembly, with particular emphasis on features they may share with bacterial protein export and pilus biogenesis systems, and it presents evidence that supports the hypothesis that one of the phage proteins functions as an outer membrane export channel.  相似文献   

17.
The 50-residue major coat protein (MCP) of Ff bacteriophage exists as a single-spanning membrane protein in the Escherichia coli host inner membrane prior to assembly into lipid-free virions. Here, the molecular bases for the specificity and stoichiometry that govern the protein-protein interactions of MCP in the host membrane are investigated in detergent micelles. To address these structural issues, as well as to circumvent viability requirements in mutants of the intact protein, peptides corresponding to the effective alpha-helical TM segment of wild-type and mutant bacteriophage MCPs were synthesized. Fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) experiments on the dansyl and dabcyl-labeled MCP TM domain peptides in detergent micelles demonstrated that the peptides specifically associate into non-covalent homodimers, as postulated for the biologically relevant membrane-embedded MCP oligomer. MCP peptides labeled with short-range pyrene fluorophores at the N terminus displayed excimer fluorescence consistent with homodimerization occurring in a parallel fashion. Variant peptides synthesized with single substitutions at helix-interactive positions displayed a wide range of dimer/monomer ratios on SDS-PAGE gels, which are interpreted in terms of steric volume, presence or absence of beta-branching, and the effect of polar substituents. The overall results indicate discrete roles for helix-helix interfacial residues as packing recognition elements in the membrane-inserted state, and suggest a possible correlation between phage viability and efficacy of MCP TM-TM interactions.  相似文献   

18.
Recent, primarily structural observations indicate that related viruses, harboring no sequence similarity, infect hosts of different domains of life. One such clade of viruses, defined by common capsid architecture and coat protein fold, is the so-called PRD1-adenovirus lineage. Here we report the structure of the marine lipid-containing bacteriophage PM2 determined by crystallographic analyses of the entire approximately 45 MDa virion and of the outer coat proteins P1 and P2, revealing PM2 to be a primeval member of the PRD1-adenovirus lineage with an icosahedral shell and canonical double beta barrel major coat protein. The view of the lipid bilayer, richly decorated with membrane proteins, constitutes a rare visualization of an in vivo membrane. The viral membrane proteins P3 and P6 are organized into a lattice, suggesting a possible assembly pathway to produce the mature virus.  相似文献   

19.
The major (gene VIII) coat protein of bacteriophage fd was radiolabelled by treating the virus with methyl[3H]acetimidate without causing any loss of infectivity. Complete amidination of lysine-8 in the amino acid sequence of the protein was achieved but little or no modification of the lysine residues near the C terminus was observed. This supports the assumption that the coat protein is oriented in the viral filament with its N terminus on the outside and its C-terminal region abutting the DNA. Escherichia coli was co-infected with radiolabelled bacteriophage and with unlabelled miniphage, a shorter defective form of phage fd. Radiolabel was detected in the progeny miniphage, proving that individual coat protein subunits can be recycled and assembled onto progeny miniphage DNA. About 35% of the coat protein subunits of phage particles infecting E. coli were recycled in 1 h. These facts support a model of the assembly and disassembly of the virion at the bacterial membrane in which the end of the particle containing the minor adsorption (gene III) protein, which is presumably the first to disassemble during infection, is the last to assemble during morphogenesis.  相似文献   

20.
The gene-3-protein (G3P) of filamentous phage is essential for their propagation. It consists of three domains. The CT domain anchors G3P in the phage coat, the N2 domain binds to the F pilus of Escherichia coli and thus initiates infection, and the N1 domain continues by interacting with the TolA receptor. Phage are thus only infective when the three domains of G3P are tightly linked, and this requirement is exploited by Proside, an in vitro selection method for proteins with increased stability. In Proside, a repertoire of variants of the protein to be stabilized is inserted between the N2 and the CT domains of G3P. Stabilized variants can be selected because they resist cleavage by a protease and thus maintain the essential linkage between the domains. The method is limited by the proteolytic stability of G3P itself. We improved the stability of G3P by subjecting the phage without a guest protein to rounds of random in vivo mutagenesis and proteolytic Proside selections. Variants of G3P with one to four mutations were selected, and the temperature at which the corresponding phage became accessible for a protease increased in a stepwise manner from 40 degrees C to almost 60 degrees C. The N1-N2 fragments of wild-type gene-3-protein and of the four selected variants were purified and their stabilities towards thermal and denaturant-induced unfolding were determined. In the biphasic transitions of these proteins domain dissociation and unfolding of N2 occur in a concerted reaction in the first step, followed by the independent unfolding of domain N1 in the second step. N2 is thus less stable than N1, and it unfolds when the interactions with N1 are broken. The strongest stabilizations were caused by mutations in domain N2, in particular in its hinge subdomain, which provides many stabilizing interactions between the N1 and N2 domains. These results reveal how the individual domains and their assembly contribute to the overall stability of two-domain proteins and how mutations are optimally placed to improve the stability of such proteins.  相似文献   

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