Abstract

Upon infection of Pseudomonas cells, jumbo phages 201Φ2–1, ΦPA3, and ΦKZ assemble a phage nucleus. Viral DNA is enclosed within the phage-encoded proteinaceous shell along with proteins associated with DNA replication, recombination and transcription. Ribosomes and proteins involved in metabolic processes are excluded from the nucleus. RNA synthesis occurs inside the phage nucleus and messenger RNA is presumably transported into the cytoplasm to be translated. Newly synthesized proteins either remain in the cytoplasm or specifically translocate into the nucleus. The molecular mechanisms governing selective protein sorting and nuclear import in these phage infection systems are currently unclear. To gain insight into this process, we studied the localization of five reporter fluorescent proteins (GFP+, sfGFP, GFPmut1, mCherry, CFP). During infection with ΦPA3 or 201Φ2–1, all five fluorescent proteins were excluded from the nucleus as expected; however, we have discovered an anomaly with the ΦKZ nuclear transport system. The fluorescent protein GFPmut1, expressed by itself, was transported into the ΦKZ phage nucleus. We identified the amino acid residues on the surface of GFPmut1 required for nuclear targeting. Fusing GFPmut1 to any protein, including proteins that normally reside in the cytoplasm, resulted in transport of the fusion into the nucleus. Although the mechanism of transport is still unknown, we demonstrate that GFPmut1 is a useful tool that can be used for fluorescent labelling and targeting of proteins into the ΦKZ phage nucleus.

Highlights

  • Protein targeting within a cell is essential in all organisms

  • GFPmut1 localized inside the FKZ nucleus even though it was excluded by the nucleus of 201F2–1 in P. chlororaphis and that of FPA3 in P. aeruginosa (Fig 1B)

  • Our results suggest that differences exist among the fluorescent proteins that affect their ability to be transported into the FKZ nucleus

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Summary

Introduction

Eukaryotes use a sorting sequence to target proteins to specific organelles, such as a nuclear localization signal to send proteins to the nucleus or an N-terminal signal peptide to target proteins to the endoplasmic reticulum. These signal sequences are usually highly conserved, even among different species [1, 2]. Though bacterial cells lack the membrane-bound organelles of eukaryotes, they still utilize a number of protein sorting strategies to target proteins either extracellularly or to specific intracellular locations [3,4,5].

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