Abstract

ABSTRACTThe P22 capsid is a T=7 icosahedrally symmetric protein shell with a portal protein dodecamer at one 5-fold vertex. Extending outwards from that vertex is a short tail, and putatively extending inwards is a 15-nm-long α-helical barrel formed by the C-terminal domains of portal protein subunits. In addition to the densely packed genome, the capsid contains three “ejection proteins” (E-proteins [gp7, gp16, and gp20]) destined to exit from the tightly sealed capsid during the process of DNA delivery into target cells. We estimated their copy numbers by quantitative SDS-PAGE as approximately 12 molecules per virion of gp16 and gp7 and 30 copies of gp20. To localize them, we used bubblegram imaging, an adaptation of cryo-electron microscopy in which gaseous bubbles induced in proteins by prolonged irradiation are used to map the proteins’ locations. We applied this technique to wild-type P22, a triple mutant lacking all three E-proteins, and three mutants each lacking one E-protein. We conclude that all three E-proteins are loosely clustered around the portal axis, in the region displaced radially inwards from the portal crown. The bubblegram data imply that approximately half of the α-helical barrel seen in the portal crystal structure is disordered in the mature virion, and parts of the disordered region present binding sites for E-proteins. Thus positioned, the E-proteins are strategically placed to pass down the shortened barrel and through the portal ring and the tail, as they exit from the capsid during an infection.

Highlights

  • The P22 capsid is a T‫؍‬7 icosahedrally symmetric protein shell with a portal protein dodecamer at one 5-fold vertex

  • Already in 1952 Hershey and Chase [3] demonstrated that phage T2 virion DNA and not “the bulk of the sulfurcontaining protein” is injected into target cells to identify DNA as the genetic material, we know that phage capsids contain internal proteins that are expelled from the virion into the cell during infection and have functions that are needed for the infection to be productive [4,5,6,7]

  • We have investigated the internal proteins of P22, a short-tailed bacteriophage of Salmonella enterica

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Summary

Introduction

The P22 capsid is a T‫؍‬7 icosahedrally symmetric protein shell with a portal protein dodecamer at one 5-fold vertex. Wild-type P22 virions and each of the mutants were prepared for cryo-EM, and dose-series images were recorded (see Text S1 in the supplemental material). In exposure 6 of this dose series on wild-type virions, ~9% of the particles already exhibit substantial bubbles, up to 9 nm (average, ~7 nm) in diam-

Results
Conclusion
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