4.7 Article

Cryo-EM Structure of a Kinetically Trapped Dodecameric Portal Protein from the Pseudomonas-phage PaP3

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
Volume 434, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmb.2022.167537

Keywords

viral genome-packaging motor; portal protein; Pseudomonas-phage PaP3; conformational heterogeneity; cryo-EM

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 GM100888, R35 GM140733]
  2. National Cancer Institute Cancer Center Support Grant [P30 CA56036]
  3. National Cancer Institutes National Cryo-EM Facility at the Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research [HSSN261200800001E]
  4. National Institutes of Health

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In this paper, the cryo-EM structure of the portal protein from the Pseudomonas-phage PaP3 was determined, revealing a helical symmetry. The study found that the barrel structure of the portal protein and the mispairing of subunits at the C-terminal affect the symmetry of portal rings. These findings expand the understanding of the structural characteristics of viral portal proteins.
Portal proteins are dodecameric assemblies that occupy a unique 5-fold vertex of the icosahedral capsid of tailed bacteriophages and herpesviruses. The portal vertex interrupts the icosahedral symmetry, and in vivo, its assembly and incorporation in procapsid are controlled by the scaffolding protein. Ectopically expressed portal oligomers are polymorphic in solution, and portal rings built by a different number of subunits have been documented in the literature. In this paper, we describe the cryo-EM structure of the portal protein from the Pseudomonas-phage PaP3, which we determined at 3.4 angstrom resolution. Structural analysis revealed a dodecamer with helical rather than rotational symmetry, which we hypothesize is kinetically trapped. The helical assembly was stabilized by local mispairing of portal subunits caused by the slippage of crown and barrel helices that move like a lever with respect to the portal body. Removing the C-terminal barrel promoted assembly of undecameric and dodecameric rings with quasi-rotational symmetry, suggesting that the barrel contributes to subunits mispairing. However, Delta C-portal rings were intrinsically asymmetric, with most particles having one open portal subunit interface. Together, these data expand the structural repertoire of viral portal proteins to Pseudomonas-phages and shed light on the unexpected plasticity of the portal protein quaternary structure. (C) 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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