4.6 Article

Atomic Structure of Bacteriophage Sf6 Tail Needle Knob

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 286, Issue 35, Pages 30867-30877

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M111.260877

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [1R56AI076509-01A1, AI074825]

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Podoviridae are double-stranded DNA bacteriophages that use short, non-contractile tails to adsorb to the host cell surface. Within the tail apparatus of P22-like phages, a dedicated fiber known as the tail needle likely functions as a cell envelope-penetrating device to promote ejection of viral DNA inside the host. In Sf6, a P22-like phage that infects Shigella flexneri, the tail needle presents a C-terminal globular knob. This knob, absent in phage P22 but shared in other members of the P22-like genus, represents the outermost exposed tip of the virion that contacts the host cell surface. Here, we report a crystal structure of the Sf6 tail needle knob determined at 1.0 angstrom resolution. The structure reveals a trimeric globular domain of the TNF fold structurally superimposable with that of the tail-less phage PRD1 spike protein P5 and the adenovirus knob, domains that in both viruses function in receptor binding. However, P22-like phages are not known to utilize a protein receptor and are thought to directly penetrate the host surface. At 1.0 angstrom resolution, we identified three equivalents of L-glutamic acid (L-Glu) bound to each subunit interface. Although intimately bound to the protein, L-Glu does not increase the structural stability of the trimer nor it affects its ability to self-trimerize in vitro. In analogy to P22 gp26, we suggest the tail needle of phage Sf6 is ejected through the bacterial cell envelope during infection and its C-terminal knob is threaded through peptidoglycan pores formed by glycan strands.

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