Mechanism of coliphage M13 contraction: intermediate structures trapped at low temperatures

  • Manning M
  • Chrysogelos S
  • Griffith J
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Abstract

The filamentous coliphage M13 can be transformed into a spherical particle (termed spheroid) by exposure to an interface of water and slightly polar but hydrophobic solvent such as chloroform-water at 24 degrees C. We report here that exposure of M13 filaments to a chloroform-water interface at 2 degrees C trapped the phage particles in forms morphologically intermediate to filaments and spheroids. These structures were rods 250 nm long and 15 nm wide, and each had a closed, slightly pointed end, an open flaired end, and a hollow central channel. The final contraction of these intermediates (termed I-forms) into spheroids was dependent upon both temperature and the presence of the solvent-water interface but was apparently independent of both the minor phage coat proteins and the virion DNA. Although stable in an aqueous environment, I-forms, in contrast to filaments, were readily disrupted by detergents, suggesting that the phage structure had been altered to a form more easily solubilized by membrane lipids. These solvent-induced changes might be related to the initial steps of phage penetration in vivo.

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Manning, M., Chrysogelos, S., & Griffith, J. (1981). Mechanism of coliphage M13 contraction: intermediate structures trapped at low temperatures. Journal of Virology, 40(3), 912–919. https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.40.3.912-919.1981

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