Abstract

The major coat protein of bacteriophage M13 has been reconstituted into phospholipids with a composition comparable to that found in the host (Escherichia coli) inner membrane. Reconstitution experiments have revealed conditions in which the alpha-oligomeric state is favored over the beta-polymeric state. Discrimination between the two states of the membrane-bound coat protein (alpha-oligomeric and beta-polymeric states) has been achieved using high-performance size-exclusion chromatography and circular dichroism. Interprotein electrostatic interactions, probably induced by head-tail binding, are initiated and facilitating the aggregation-related conformational change process, in which alpha-oligomeric coat protein is converted into beta-polymeric coat protein. A model for this beta-polymerization process of the coat protein is presented. The alpha-helical protein has been studied by the in situ Trp fluorescence quantum yield. This shows that the average distances between coat proteins decrease upon lowering the L/P ratio. In situ cross-linking reactions of the coat protein at high L/P ratios reveal a monomeric state, thus excluding specific aggregation of the coat protein. A monomeric state of detergent-solubilized coat protein is also observed using SDS-PAGE and SDS-HPSEC. On the basis of these results, the smallest in situ aggregational entity of the coat protein is proposed to be a monomer. This finding is discussed in relation to the functional state of the M13 coat protein in the membrane-bound assembly and disassembly processes during infection.

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