| Literature DB >> 23170165 |
Jennifer Mahony1, Douwe van Sinderen.
Abstract
Knowledge of phage-host interactions at a fundamental level is central to the design of rational strategies for the development of phage-resistant strains that may be applied in industrial settings. Phages infecting lactic acid bacteria, in particular Lactococcus lactis and Streptococcus thermophilus, negatively impact on dairy fermentation processes with serious economic implications. In recent years a wealth of information on structural protein assembly and topology has become available relating to phages infecting Escherichia coli, Bacillus subtilis and Lactococcus lactis, which act as models for structural analyses of dairy phages. In this review, we explore the role of model tailed phages, such as T4 and SPP1, in advancing our knowledge regarding interactions between dairy phages and their hosts. Furthermore, the potential of currently investigated dairy phages to in turn serve as model systems for this particular group of phages is discussed.Entities:
Keywords: bacteriophage; milk fermentation; receptor
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23170165 PMCID: PMC3499812 DOI: 10.3390/v4091410
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Proven and putative phage receptors.
| Host | Phage | Receptor type | Host receptor | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| SPP1 | Protein | YueB | [ |
|
| T4-like | Protein | OmpC/LPS | [ |
| T5 | Protein | FhuA | [ | |
| Λ | Protein | LamB | [ | |
|
| c2 | Protein | PIP | [ |
| p2 | Saccharide | Unknown | [ | |
| bIL170 | Saccharide | Unknown | [ | |
| TP901–1 | Saccharide | Unknown | [ | |
| Tuc2009 | Saccharide | Unknown | ||
|
| LL-H | Lipoteichoic acid | Poly-Glycerophosphate LTAs | [ |
|
| OBJ | Saccharide | Glucosamine/Ribose | [ |
| CYM | Saccharide | Glucosamine/Rhamnose | [ |
Figure 1Schematic representation of a top view of the re-organisation of the p2 (top) and SPP1 (bottom) baseplate regions before (right) and after (left) binding to the host cell. The p2 baseplate, composed of a hexamer of ORF15 (orange), a trimer of ORF16 (green) and six trimers of ORF18 (blue) which represents the RBP. In parallel, the SPP1 distal tail region is composed of two back-to-back hexamers of gp19.1 (orange) and a trimer of gp21 (green) bound to each of the Dit (gp19.1) hexamers, one trimer in the open conformation and the other in the closed conformation. A representation of the genomic regions that encode the tail structural components are presented in the lowermost section, including the genes encoding the proposed major tail protein (pink), the tail tape measure protein (purple), the distal tail protein (Dit)/hub protein (orange), the tail spike (SPP1) or tail tip (p2) (green) and the RBP (blue, p2). Those in grey encode non-structural proteins or have not been functionally assigned.
Figure 2A schematic representation of the distal tail region of Tuc2009, TP901–1 and p2. The stacks of tail rings composed of the major tail protein (MTP) (blue) with the distal tail (Dit) protein (orange) beneath, upon which the baseplate components are hinged (green and purple). In the case of Tuc2009 the green area represents the upper baseplate disc (BppU and BppA) while the TP901–1 upper disc is composed of BppU only. The lower baseplate (BppL) is presented in purple with a disc representation for TP901–1 and a so‑called “petticoat” representation for Tuc2009. The protrusion from the baseplates of TP901–1 and Tuc2009 represent the tail associated lysin (Tal) (red). The schematic of the baseplate region of p2 highlights ORF15 (orange) at the base of the tail with ORF16 beneath (red) and the RBP in the active downward orientation (purple).