| Literature DB >> 25864106 |
Margaret M Suhanovsky1, Carolyn M Teschke2.
Abstract
For many (if not all) bacterial and archaeal tailed viruses and eukaryotic Herpesvirdae the HK97-fold serves as the major architectural element in icosahedral capsid formation while still enabling the conformational flexibility required during assembly and maturation. Auxiliary proteins or Δ-domains strictly control assembly of multiple, identical, HK97-like subunits into procapsids with specific icosahedral symmetries, rather than aberrant non-icosahedral structures. Procapsids are precursor structures that mature into capsids in a process involving release of auxiliary proteins (or cleavage of Δ-domains), dsDNA packaging, and conformational rearrangement of the HK97-like subunits. Some coat proteins built on the ubiquitous HK97-fold also have accessory domains or loops that impart specific functions, such as increased monomer, procapsid, or capsid stability. In this review, we analyze the numerous HK97-like coat protein structures that are emerging in the literature (over 40 at time of writing) by comparing their topology, additional domains, and their assembly and misassembly reactions.Entities:
Keywords: Accessory domain; Bacteriophage; Capsid protein structure; Coat protein; HK97-fold
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25864106 PMCID: PMC4424165 DOI: 10.1016/j.virol.2015.02.055
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virology ISSN: 0042-6822 Impact factor: 3.616