4.7 Article

Correct Assembly of the Bacteriophage T5 Procapsid Requires Both the Maturation Protease and the Portal Complex

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
Volume 428, Issue 1, Pages 165-181

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmb.2015.11.019

Keywords

capsid assembly; portal; scaffolding; tailed bacteriophage; maturation protease

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health from U.S. Public Health Service [GM47795]
  2. French National Research Agency [ANR-06-PCV-134946]

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The 90-nm-diameter capsid of coliphage T5 is organized with T = 13 icosahedral geometry and encloses a double-stranded DNA genome that measures 121 kbp. Its assembly follows a path similar to that of phage HK97 but yielding a larger structure that includes 775 subunits of the major head protein, 12 subunits of the portal protein and 120 subunits of the decoration protein. As for phage HK97, T5 encodes the scaffold function as an N-terminal extension (Delta-domain) to the major head protein that is cleaved by the maturation protease after assembly of the initial prohead I form and prior to DNA packaging and capsid expansion. Although the major head protein alone is sufficient to assemble capsid-like particles, the yield is poor and includes many deformed structures. Here we explore the role of both the portal and the protease in capsid assembly by generating constructs that include the major head protein and a combination of protease (wild type or an inactive mutant) and portal proteins and overexpressing them in Escherichia coli. Our results show that the inactive protease mutant acts to trigger assembly of the major head protein, probably through binding to the Delta-domain, while the portal protein regulates assembly into the correct T = 13 geometry. A cryo-electron microscopy reconstruction of prohead I including inactivated protease reveals density projecting from the prohead interior surface toward its center that is compatible with the Delta-domain, as well as additional internal density that we assign as the inactivated protease. These results reveal complexity in T5 beyond that of the HK97 system. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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