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Detection of intermediates and kinetic control during assembly of bacteriophage P22 procapsid.

Authors :
Tuma R
Tsuruta H
French KH
Prevelige PE
Source :
Journal of molecular biology [J Mol Biol] 2008 Sep 19; Vol. 381 (5), pp. 1395-406. Date of Electronic Publication: 2008 Jun 14.
Publication Year :
2008

Abstract

Bacteriophage P22 serves as a model for the assembly and maturation of other icosahedral double-stranded DNA viruses. P22 coat and scaffolding proteins assemble in vitro into an icosahedral procapsid, which then expands during DNA packaging (maturation). Efficient in vitro assembly makes this system suitable for design and production of monodisperse spherical nanoparticles (diameter approximately 50 nm). In this work, we explore the possibility of controlling the outcome of assembly by scaffolding protein engineering. The scaffolding protein exists in monomer-dimer-tetramer equilibrium. We address the role of monomers and dimers in assembly by using three different scaffolding proteins with altered monomer-dimer equilibrium (weak dimer, covalent dimer, monomer). The progress and outcome of assembly was monitored by time-resolved X-ray scattering, which allowed us to distinguish between closed shells and incomplete assembly intermediates. Binding of scaffolding monomer activates the coat protein for assembly. Excess dimeric scaffolding protein resulted in rapid nucleation and kinetic trapping yielding incomplete shells. Addition of monomeric wild-type scaffold with excess coat protein completed these metastable shells. Thus, the monomeric scaffolding protein plays an essential role in the elongation phase by activating the coat and effectively lowering its critical concentration for assembly.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1089-8638
Volume :
381
Issue :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of molecular biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
18582476
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmb.2008.06.020