Literature DB >> 11526317

Structure determination of the head-tail connector of bacteriophage phi29.

A A Simpson1, P G Leiman, Y Tao, Y He, M O Badasso, P J Jardine, D L Anderson, M G Rossmann.   

Abstract

The head-tail connector of bacteriophage phi29 is composed of 12 36 kDa subunits with 12-fold symmetry. It is the central component of a rotary motor that packages the genomic dsDNA into preformed proheads. This motor consists of the head-tail connector, surrounded by a phi29-encoded, 174-base, RNA and a viral ATPase protein, both of which have fivefold symmetry in three-dimensional cryo-electron microscopy reconstructions. DNA is translocated into the prohead through a 36 A diameter pore in the center of the connector, where the DNA takes the role of a motor spindle. The helical nature of the DNA allows the rotational action of the connector to be transformed into a linear translation of the DNA. The crystal structure determination of connector crystals in space group C2 was initiated by molecular replacement, using an approximately 20 A resolution model derived from cryo-electron microscopy. The model phases were extended to 3.5 A resolution using 12-fold non-crystallographic symmetry averaging and solvent flattening. Although this electron density was not interpretable, the phases were adequate to locate the position of 24 mercury sites of a thimerosal heavy-atom derivative. The resultant 3.2 A single isomorphous replacement phases were improved using density modification, producing an interpretable electron-density map. The crystallographically refined structure was used as a molecular-replacement model to solve the structures of two other crystal forms of the connector molecule. One of these was in the same space group and almost isomorphous, whereas the other was in space group P2(1)2(1)2. The structural differences between the oligomeric connector molecules in the three crystal forms and between different monomers within each crystal show that the structure is relatively flexible, particularly in the protruding domain at the wide end of the connector. This domain probably acts as a bearing, allowing the connector to rotate within the pentagonal portal of the prohead during DNA packaging.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11526317     DOI: 10.1107/s0907444901010435

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr        ISSN: 0907-4449


  47 in total

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5.  Structural changes of bacteriophage phi29 upon DNA packaging and release.

Authors:  Ye Xiang; Marc C Morais; Anthony J Battisti; Shelley Grimes; Paul J Jardine; Dwight L Anderson; Michael G Rossmann
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6.  The effect of N- or C-terminal alterations of the connector of bacteriophage phi29 DNA packaging motor on procapsid assembly, pRNA binding, and DNA packaging.

Authors:  Ying Cai; Feng Xiao; Peixuan Guo
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7.  The scrunchworm hypothesis: transitions between A-DNA and B-DNA provide the driving force for genome packaging in double-stranded DNA bacteriophages.

Authors:  Stephen C Harvey
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Authors:  Zhi Zhou; Zhouxiang Ji; Shaoying Wang; Farzin Haque; Peixuan Guo
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9.  Fabrication of massive sheets of single layer patterned arrays using lipid directed reengineered phi29 motor dodecamer.

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Journal:  ACS Nano       Date:  2009-01-27       Impact factor: 15.881

10.  Translocation of double-stranded DNA through membrane-adapted phi29 motor protein nanopores.

Authors:  David Wendell; Peng Jing; Jia Geng; Varuni Subramaniam; Tae Jin Lee; Carlo Montemagno; Peixuan Guo
Journal:  Nat Nanotechnol       Date:  2009-09-27       Impact factor: 39.213

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