Back to Search Start Over

Structure of a Bacterial Virus DNA-Injection Protein Complex Reveals a Decameric Assembly with a Constricted Molecular Channel

Authors :
Tsutomu Matsui
Jeffrey A. Speir
Thomas M. Weiss
Lingfei Liang
Haiyan Zhao
Brittany Varnado
Anna Y. Lynn
Liang Tang
Zihan Lin
Source :
PLoS ONE, Vol 11, Iss 2, p e0149337 (2016), PLoS ONE
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2016.

Abstract

The multi-layered cell envelope structure of Gram-negative bacteria represents significant physical and chemical barriers for short-tailed phages to inject phage DNA into the host cytoplasm. Here we show that a DNA-injection protein of bacteriophage Sf6, gp12, forms a 465-kDa, decameric assembly in vitro. The electron microscopic structure of the gp12 assembly shows a ~150-Å, mushroom-like architecture consisting of a crown domain and a tube-like domain, which embraces a 25-Å-wide channel that could precisely accommodate dsDNA. The constricted channel suggests that gp12 mediates rapid, uni-directional injection of phage DNA into host cells by providing a molecular conduit for DNA translocation. The assembly exhibits a 10-fold symmetry, which may be a common feature among DNA-injection proteins of P22-like phages and may suggest a symmetry mismatch with respect to the 6-fold symmetric phage tail. The gp12 monomer is highly flexible in solution, supporting a mechanism for translocation of the protein through the conduit of the phage tail toward the host cell envelope, where it assembles into a DNA-injection device.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19326203
Volume :
11
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PLoS ONE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....80493891622748d80f4025cc63dbba2e