| Literature DB >> 23951045 |
Justin C Leavitt1, Lasha Gogokhia, Eddie B Gilcrease, Anshul Bhardwaj, Gino Cingolani, Sherwood R Casjens.
Abstract
The P22-like bacteriophages have short tails. Their virions bind to their polysaccharide receptors through six trimeric tailspike proteins that surround the tail tip. These short tails also have a trimeric needle protein that extends beyond the tailspikes from the center of the tail tip, in a position that suggests that it should make first contact with the host's outer membrane during the infection process. The base of the needle serves as a plug that keeps the DNA in the virion, but role of the needle during adsorption and DNA injection is not well understood. Among the P22-like phages are needle types with two completely different C-terminal distal tip domains. In the phage Sf6-type needle, unlike the other P22-type needle, the distal tip folds into a "knob" with a TNF-like fold, similar to the fiber knobs of bacteriophage PRD1 and Adenovirus. The phage HS1 knob is very similar to that of Sf6, and we report here its crystal structure which, like the Sf6 knob, contains three bound L-glutamate molecules. A chimeric P22 phage with a tail needle that contains the HS1 terminal knob efficiently infects the P22 host, Salmonella enterica, suggesting the knob does not confer host specificity. Likewise, mutations that should abrogate the binding of L-glutamate to the needle do not appear to affect virion function, but several different other genetic changes to the tip of the needle slow down potassium release from the host during infection. These findings suggest that the needle plays a role in phage P22 DNA delivery by controlling the kinetics of DNA ejection into the host.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23951045 PMCID: PMC3741392 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0070936
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Relationships among tail needle C-terminal domains of the P22-like phages.
A neighbor-joining tree (created with Clustal X2 [80]) is shown with selected branch lengths (numbers between 0. and 1) and bootstrap values out of 1000 trials (between 1 and 1000). The nodes far from the branch tips are not well-supported and are not shown. A scale in fractional difference is shown in the lower left. Branches A, B and C have many members and the splits at these branch tips show the regions within which the individual members diverge (the larger tree in figure S1 shows the placement of all the individual sequences). The “phage Sf6” branch is not related to the other branches and its inclusion here is to demonstrate this, and does not imply any phylogenetic relationship with the other branches. The branches not labeled “phage” are from P22-like prophages in the following bacterial genome sequences: Rett1, Providencia rettgeri DSM 1131; Ars1, Arsenophonus nasoniae; APSE-1/−2, Hamiltonella defensa; øSG1, Sodalis glossinidius; Cart1, Pectobacterium carotovorum PBR1692; Morg1, Morganella morganii KT; Serr1/2/3, Serratia plymuthica strains AS9, AS12 and AS13; Blatt1/2, Escherichia blattae strains DSM 4481 and 105725.
Crystallographic data collection and refinement statistics.
| Data collection statistics | |
| Wavelength (Å) | 0.9537 |
| Space group | p212121 |
| Unit cell dimensions (Å) |
|
| Angles (°) | α = β = γ = 90 |
| Resolution range (Å) | 20-1.1 |
| Wilson | 8.94 |
| Total observations | 1,053,320 |
| Unique observations | 176,986 |
| Completeness | 99.1 (92.8) |
| Redundancy | 6.0 (5.3) |
|
| 7.2 (49.9) |
| <I>/<σ(I)> | 29.96 (2.4) |
|
| |
| Number of reflections (10-1.1 Å) | 176,905 |
|
| 15.13/15.70 |
| Number copies in asymm. unit | 1 |
| Number of water molecules | 754 |
|
| 10.6/10.37/10.91/24.22 |
| r.m.s. deviation from ideal bond length (Å)/angles (°) | 0.008/1.3 |
| Ramachandran plot (%)core/allowed/generously allowed/disallowed | 92.7/7.3/0.0/0.0 |
Highest resolution shell is shown in parenthesis.
R|I(i,h) – |/∑|I(i,h)| where I(i,h) and are the ith and mean measurement of intensity of reflection h.
The R free value was calculated using 2,000 reflections.
Figure 2Atomic structure of the phage HS1 tail needle knob.
A. Ribbon diagram of bacteriophage HS1 tail needle knob determined crystallographically to 1.1 Å resolution; the N-termini are at the bottom of the diagram. Helices are shown in red, ß-sheets in yellow, and random coil in green; the bound L-glutamate is shown as sticks-and-balls and phosphate is shown as a small red sticks. B. Magnified view of L-glutamate trapped at the HS1 needle knob dimeric protomer:protomer interface. L-glutamate (in stick-and-balls) is overlaid to the final 2Fo-Fc electron density map (gray) contoured at 1.5σ above background. C. Side chains (sticks) from protomer A (yellow) and protomer B (green) that interact with L-glutamate (stick-and-balls). The indicated HS1 needle amino acids correspond to Sf6 needle amino acids as follows with Sf6 residue numbers in parentheses: Glu181(146), Lys235(200), Ser283(248), Asp285(250), Leu290(255) and Lys312(277). D. Structural models of full length Sf6 and HS1 tail needles. The two amino acid differences (from the Sf6 needle) that lie at positions in or near the knob domain, Ser169 and Ala305 of the HS1 tail needle, are shown as blue spheres. The models were obtained by using the Robetta full-chain protein structure prediction server [81]; the N-terminal parts of the needle protein shafts whose structures are modeled from the homologous P22 tail needle have a light gray surface contour behind. In all the panels, α-helices, β-strands and loops are colored in red, yellow and green, respectively.
Figure 3Structural models of the P22 gp26 tail needle and chimeric tail needles.
A. Crystal structure of P22 tail needle gp26 (pdb 3C9I). B–D. Homology structural models of chimeric P22 needles with Sf6 knob (in phage UC-0911), HS1 knob (in phage UC-0926) and foldon tip (in phage UC-0927). Chimeric models were generated for illustration with align function of PyMol (Version 1.3, Schrodinger, LLC, San Carlos, CA), where C-terminal knob domains of Sf6 and HS1 tail needle (pdb 3RWN, 4K6B), C-terminal foldon domain from fibritin fiber of the bacteriophage T4 (pdb 1AA0) were fused downstream of P22 gp26 tail needle helical core residues 1–140 (pdb 3C9I), respectively. In all three models, arrow indicates point of fusion.
Phage and bacteria used in this study.
| Bacterial strain | Genotype | Reference |
| UB-0001 | (DB7000) |
|
| UB-0002 | (DB7004) |
|
| UB-0020 | (MS1868) |
|
| UB-0134 |
|
|
| UB-1732 |
|
|
| UB-1737 | (TH2788) | |
| UB-1790 | UB-20 |
|
| UB-1807 | UB-20 | |
| UB-1832 | UB-20 (P22 | |
| UB-1918 | UB-20 (P22 | |
| UB-1919 | UB-20 (P22 | |
| UB-1920 | UB-20 (P22 | |
| UB-1921 | UB-20 (P22 | |
| UB-1922 | UB-20 (P22 | |
| UB-1924 | UB-20 (P22 | |
| UB-1925 | UB-20 (P22 | |
| UB-1926 | UB-20 (P22 | |
| UB-1927 | UB-20 (P22 | |
| UB-1928 | UB-20 (P22 | |
| UB-1929 | UB-20 (P22 | |
| UB-1940 | UB-20 (P22 | |
| UB-1941 | UB-20 | |
| UB-1942 | UB-20 (P22 | |
| UB-1943 | UB-20 (P22 | |
| UB-1944 | UB-20 (P22 | |
| UB-2078 | UB-20 | |
| UB-2083 | UB-20 | |
| UB-2130 | (TH18984) | |
|
| ||
| UC-0011 | P22 |
|
| UC-0911 | P22 | |
| UC-0918 | P22 | |
| UC-0926 | P22 | |
| UC-0927 | P22 | |
| UC-0931 | P22 | |
| UC-0932 | P22 | |
| UC-0933 | P22 |
All strains are S. enterica serovar Typhimurium LT2 derivatives, except UB-1732 which is E. coli.
Strain names in parentheses are the names used in the laboratory from which the strain was obtained. UB-20 in the “Genotype” column indicates derivatives of parental strain UB-0020. Mutant prophage codons are shown in square brackets; multiple mutants have the same codon changes as single mutants.
Effects of genetic modification the C-terminal needle domain.
| Phage source | Lysate titer | Virion infectivity |
| UB-1790 Parent P22 phage | 1.7×1010 | 1.0 |
| UB-2083 HS1-1 hybrid needle phage | 7.5×109 | 1.1 |
| UB-1918 Sf6-3 hybrid needle phage | 6.2×109 | 2.1 |
| UB-1919 Glu146Asp | 5.5×109 | 0.8 |
| UB-1920 Glu146Ala | 5.2×109 | 1.7 |
| UB-1925 Lys200Ala | 1.4×109 | 2.0 |
| UB-1926 Lys200Glu | 2.6×109 | 1.4 |
| UB-1921 Ser248Thr | 6.3×109 | 2.0 |
| UB-1922 Ser248Ala | 3.8×109 | 2.1 |
| UB-1924 Asp250Ala | 2.1×109 | 2.9 |
| UB-1927 Glu146Ala/Asp250Ala | 1.8×1010 | 1.0 |
| UB-1928 Lys200Ala/Asp250Ala | 1.4×109 | 1.8 |
| UB-1929 Glu146Ala/Lys200Ala | 2.9×109 | 1.3 |
| UB-1941 Foldon | 8.3×109 | 0.13 |
Salmonella lysogens are listed that were induced to prepare stocks of the phages in the table; the amino acid changes in the L-glutamate binding site of the needle are shown after the Sf6-hybrid needle phage strain names (UB-1919 to 1929).
Lysogens were induced with mitomycin C and titered on Salmonella strain UB-0002; average results from several replicates are shown.
Phage particles were purified through CsCl step gradients [68], and phage titers were determined on Salmonella strain UB-0002. Relative PFU/particle ratios were calculated by normalization to UB-1790 titer (PFU) and to the intensity of quantified coat protein bands in SDS electrophoresis gels and/or OD280 (particles). Several replicates were performed for each phage with similar results, and the average value is shown.
The prophages all have the following genetic background: P22 26::Sf6-3, sieAΔ1, 15ΔSC302::KanR, 13amH101 (see table 2).
Figure 4Potassium ion release by phage P22 infection.
A. Infection of Salmonella strain UB-0001 by P22 clear mutant phage UC-0011 at different multiplicities of infection (MOIs). Full strain genotypes at given in Table 2 of article text. B. Infection of Salmonella UB-0001 at 30° and 37°C by phage P22 UC-0011. C. Infection of Salmonella host strains that have (UB-0001) or do not have (UB-2130) P22’s O-antigen surface polysaccharide receptor by phage P22 UC-011; potassium ion release by uninfected Salmonella UB-0001 is also shown for comparison. D. Infection of a Salmonella host that has no P22 prophage (UB-0001) and a host that carries a P22 prophage that expresses its repressor (c2) gene but is missing the sieA and gtrABC genes (UB-0134) by P22 UC-0011. E. Infection of Salmonella UB-0001 by P22 phages that carry two mutations in the tail needle knob that should abrogate L-glutamate binding (see Table 2 of article text for amino acid changes). All infections were carried out at 30°C and MOI of 10 unless otherwise indicated. F. Infection of Salmonella UB-0001 by P22 UC-0011 with and without 10 mM L-glutamate added to the medium outside of the cells. Potassium ion measurements were performed as described in Materials and Methods of article text.
Figure 5Potassium ion release by P22 phages with modified tail needles.
A. Infection of Salmonella strain UB-0001 by P22 phages with altered needle proteins at MOI = 10. Potassium ion release was measured at 30°C as described in Materials and methods with a potassium electrode. Salmonella host strain UB-0001 was infected by the following phages: UC-0911 fully P22 tail needle (▴); UC-0918, needle has Sf6 C-terminal knob domain and part of the shaft (▵); UC-0926, needle has HS1 C-terminal knob domain (•); UC-0927, foldon replaces needle C-terminal domain (⧫); no phage infection (○). B. Infection of Salmonella strain UB-0001 by P22 phages with foldon-tipped needle at various MOIs as follows: P22 UC-0911 with fully P22 tail needle at MOI = 10 (○); P22 UC-0927 where foldon replaces needle’s C-terminal domain at MOI = 10 (•), MOI = 50 (▪) and MOI = 100 (⧫); no phage (□). The horizontal axis is time after infection.