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1.
J Bacteriol ; 195(24): 5461-8, 2013 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24097944

RESUMO

A variety of bacterial pathogenicity determinants, including the type VI secretion system and the virulence cassettes from Photorhabdus and Serratia, share an evolutionary origin with contractile-tailed myophages. The well-characterized Escherichia coli phage P2 provides an excellent system for studies related to these systems, as its protein composition appears to represent the "minimal" myophage tail. In this study, we used nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy to determine the solution structure of gpX, a 68-residue tail baseplate protein. Although the sequence and structure of gpX are similar to those of LysM domains, which are a large family associated with peptidoglycan binding, we did not detect a peptidoglycan-binding activity for gpX. However, bioinformatic analysis revealed that half of all myophages, including all that possess phage T4-like baseplates, encode a tail protein with a LysM-like domain, emphasizing a widespread role for this domain in baseplate function. While phage P2 gpX comprises only a single LysM domain, many myophages display LysM domain fusions with other tail proteins, such as the DNA circulation protein found in Mu-like phages and gp53 of T4-like phages. Electron microscopy of P2 phage particles with an incorporated gpX-maltose binding protein fusion revealed that gpX is located at the top of the baseplate, near the junction of the baseplate and tail tube. gpW, the orthologue of phage T4 gp25, was also found to localize to this region. A general colocalization of LysM-like domains and gpW homologues in diverse phages is supported by our bioinformatic analysis.


Assuntos
Bacteriófago P2/química , Bacteriófago P2/fisiologia , Escherichia coli/virologia , Proteínas da Cauda Viral/química , Proteínas da Cauda Viral/metabolismo , Bacteriófago P2/ultraestrutura , Glicoproteínas/química , Glicoproteínas/metabolismo , Espectroscopia de Ressonância Magnética , Microscopia Eletrônica , Conformação Proteica , Vírion/química , Vírion/ultraestrutura
2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 107(32): 14384-9, 2010 Aug 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20660769

RESUMO

Evolutionary relationships may exist among very diverse groups of proteins even though they perform different functions and display little sequence similarity. The tailed bacteriophages present a uniquely amenable system for identifying such groups because of their huge diversity yet conserved genome structures. In this work, we used structural, functional, and genomic context comparisons to conclude that the head-tail connector protein and tail tube protein of bacteriophage lambda diverged from a common ancestral protein. Further comparisons of tertiary and quaternary structures indicate that the baseplate hub and tail terminator proteins of bacteriophage may also be part of this same family. We propose that all of these proteins evolved from a single ancestral tail tube protein fold, and that gene duplication followed by differentiation led to the specialized roles of these proteins seen in bacteriophages today. Although this type of evolutionary mechanism has been proposed for other systems, our work provides an evolutionary mechanism for a group of proteins with different functions that bear no sequence similarity. Our data also indicate that the addition of a structural element at the N terminus of the lambda head-tail connector protein endows it with a distinctive protein interaction capability compared with many of its putative homologues.


Assuntos
Bacteriófagos/genética , Evolução Molecular , Proteínas Virais/genética , Montagem de Vírus , Bacteriófagos/química , Proteínas Virais/fisiologia
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