Repository logo
 

The architecture and stabilisation of flagellotropic tailed bacteriophages

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Change log

Authors

Belousoff, Matthew J. 
Wang, Jiawei 

Abstract

Abstract: Flagellotropic bacteriophages engage flagella to reach the bacterial surface as an effective means to increase the capture radius for predation. Structural details of these viruses are of great interest given the substantial drag forces and torques they face when moving down the spinning flagellum. We show that the main capsid and auxiliary proteins form two nested chainmails that ensure the integrity of the bacteriophage head. Core stabilising structures are conserved in herpesviruses suggesting their ancestral origin. The structure of the tail also reveals a robust yet pliable assembly. Hexameric rings of the tail-tube protein are braced by the N-terminus and a β-hairpin loop, and interconnected along the tail by the splayed β-hairpins. By contrast, we show that the β-hairpin has an inhibitory role in the tail-tube precursor, preventing uncontrolled self-assembly. Dyads of acidic residues inside the tail-tube present regularly-spaced motifs well suited to DNA translocation into bacteria through the tail.

Description

Funder: Sir Henry Wellcome Fellow (106077/Z/14/Z)


Funder: Australian Research Council Laureate Fellow (FL130100038)

Keywords

Article, /631/45/535/1258, /631/326/596/432, /631/326/596/2148, /101/28, /145, /82/80, /82/16, article

Journal Title

Nature Communications

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2041-1723

Volume Title

11

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group UK
Sponsorship
Department of Health | National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) (1092262)