Molecular Architecture of Salmonella Typhimurium Virus P22 Genome Ejection Machinery

Stephano M. Iglesias, Ravi K. Lokareddy, Ruoyu Yang, Fenglin Li, Daniel P. Yeggoni, Chun Feng David Hou, Makayla N. Leroux, Juliana R. Cortines, Justin C. Leavitt, Mary Bird, Sherwood R. Casjens, Simon White, Carolyn M. Teschke, Gino Cingolani

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

10 Scopus citations

Abstract

Bacteriophage P22 is a prototypical member of the Podoviridae superfamily. Since its discovery in 1952, P22 has become a paradigm for phage transduction and a model for icosahedral viral capsid assembly. Here, we describe the complete architecture of the P22 tail apparatus (gp1, gp4, gp10, gp9, and gp26) and the potential location and organization of P22 ejection proteins (gp7, gp20, and gp16), determined using cryo-EM localized reconstruction, genetic knockouts, and biochemical analysis. We found that the tail apparatus exists in two equivalent conformations, rotated by ∼6° relative to the capsid. Portal protomers make unique contacts with coat subunits in both conformations, explaining the 12:5 symmetry mismatch. The tail assembles around the hexameric tail hub (gp10), which folds into an interrupted β-propeller characterized by an apical insertion domain. The tail hub connects proximally to the dodecameric portal protein and head-to-tail adapter (gp4), distally to the trimeric tail needle (gp26), and laterally to six trimeric tailspikes (gp9) that attach asymmetrically to gp10 insertion domain. Cryo-EM analysis of P22 mutants lacking the ejection proteins gp7 or gp20 and biochemical analysis of purified recombinant proteins suggest that gp7 and gp20 form a molecular complex associated with the tail apparatus via the portal protein barrel. We identified a putative signal transduction pathway from the tailspike to the tail needle, mediated by three flexible loops in the tail hub, that explains how lipopolysaccharide (LPS) is sufficient to trigger the ejection of the P22 DNA in vitro.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number168365
JournalJournal of molecular biology
Volume435
Issue number24
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 15 2023
Externally publishedYes

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Biophysics
  • Structural Biology
  • Molecular Biology

Keywords

  • DNA-ejectosome
  • Salmonella-phages
  • bacteriophage P22
  • ejection proteins
  • viral genome ejection

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