Abstract

The head-to-tail connecting region of bacteriophage φ29 has been studied by isolating neck-tail complexes from disrupted phage. These complexes can be isolated with appendages (from wild-type phage) or without appendages (from phage mutant sus12). Treatment of the neck-tail complex without appendages with urea or guanidinium hydrochloride releases the tail protein (p9) from the neck complex (proteins p10 and p11). Electron micrographs of φ29 necks show that they are composed of two collars and a thin axial tube. There is an internal hole along the longitudinal axis, from the upper collar to the thin tube. Image-processing analysis of electron micrographs of two-dimensional crystals of necks shows that the neck of phage φ29 consists of 12 external units and an internal area of apparent 6-fold symmetry, with a hole in the centre.

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