1. Atomic structure of single-stranded DNA bacteriophage phi X174 and its functional implications
- Author
-
McKenna, R, Xia, D, Willingmann, P, Ilag, LL, Krishnaswamy, S, Rossmann, MG, Olson, NH, Baker, TS, and Incardona, NL
- Subjects
Viral Structural Proteins ,Molecular Structure ,Protein Conformation ,General Science & Technology ,1.1 Normal biological development and functioning ,Molecular Sequence Data ,DNA ,Ion Channels ,Viral Proteins ,Capsid ,Infectious Diseases ,X-Ray Diffraction ,Underpinning research ,Mutation ,Viral ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Bacteriophage phi X 174 - Abstract
The mechanism of DNA ejection, viral assembly and evolution are related to the structure of bacteriophage phi X174. The F protein forms a T = 1 capsid whose major folding motif is the eight-stranded antiparallel beta barrel found in many other icosahedral viruses. Groups of 5 G proteins form 12 dominating spikes that enclose a hydrophilic channel containing some diffuse electron density. Each G protein is a tight beta barrel with its strands running radially outwards and with a topology similar to that of the F protein. The 12 'pilot' H proteins per virion may be partially located in the putative ion channel. The small, basic J protein is associated with the DNA and is situated in an interior cleft of the F protein. Tentatively, there are three regions of partially ordered DNA structure
- Published
- 1992