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Group name Informatique
Item Type Journal Article
Title The opening of the SPP1 bacteriophage tail, a prevalent mechanism in Gram-positive-infecting siphophages
Creator Goulet et al.
Author Adeline Goulet
Author Joséphine Lai-Kee-Him
Author David Veesler
Author Isabelle Auzat
Author Gautier Robin
Author Dale A. Shepherd
Author Alison E. Ashcroft
Author Eric Richard
Author Julie Lichière
Author Paulo Tavares
Author Christian Cambillau
Author Patrick Bron
Abstract The SPP1 siphophage uses its long non-contractile tail and tail tip to recognize and infect the Gram-positive bacterium Bacillus subtilis. The tail-end cap and its attached tip are the critical components for host recognition and opening of the tail tube for genome exit. In the present work, we determined the cryo-electron microscopic (cryo-EM) structure of a complex formed by the cap protein gp19.1 (Dit) and the N terminus of the downstream protein of gp19.1 in the SPP1 genome, gp21(1-552) (Tal). This complex assembles two back-to-back stacked gp19.1 ring hexamers, interacting loosely, and two gp21(1-552) trimers interacting with gp19.1 at both ends of the stack. Remarkably, one gp21(1-552) trimer displays a "closed" conformation, whereas the second is "open" delineating a central channel. The two conformational states dock nicely into the EM map of the SPP1 cap domain, respectively, before and after DNA release. Moreover, the open/closed conformations of gp19.1-gp21(1-552) are consistent with the structures of the corresponding proteins in the siphophage p2 baseplate, where the Tal protein (ORF16) attached to the ring of Dit (ORF15) was also found to adopt these two conformations. Therefore, the present contribution allowed us to revisit the SPP1 tail distal-end architectural organization. Considering the sequence conservation among Dit and the N-terminal region of Tal-like proteins in Gram-positive-infecting Siphoviridae, it also reveals the Tal opening mechanism as a hallmark of siphophages probably involved in the generation of the firing signal initiating the cascade of events that lead to phage DNA release in vivo.
Publication The Journal of Biological Chemistry
Volume 286
Issue 28
Pages 25397-25405
Date Jul 15, 2011
Journal Abbr J. Biol. Chem.
Language eng
DOI 10.1074/jbc.M111.243360
ISSN 1083-351X
Library Catalog PubMed
Extra PMID: 21622577 PMCID: PMC3137110
Tags Bacillus subtilis, Genome, Viral, Protein Structure, Tertiary, Siphoviridae, Viral Structural Proteins, Virus Attachment
Date Added 2019/12/19 - 17:15:18
Date Modified 2019/12/19 - 17:15:18
Notes and Attachments PubMed entry (Attachment)
Texte intégral (Attachment)


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