Molecular architecture of bacteriophage T4 capsid: Vertex structure and bimodal binding of the stabilizing accessory protein, Soc

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Abstract

T4 encodes two dispensable proteins that bind to the outer surface of the mature capsid. Soc (9 kDa) stabilizes the capsid against extremes of alkaline pH and temperature, but Hoc (40 kDa) has no perceptible effect. Both proteins have been developed as display platforms. Their positions on the hexagonal surface lattice of gp23*, the major capsid protein, were previously defined by two-dimensional image averaging of negatively stained electron micrographs of elongated variant capsids. We have extended these observations by reconstructing cryo-electron micrographs of isometric capsids produced by a point mutant in gene 23, for both Hoc+.Soc+ and Hoc+.Soc- phages. The expected T = 13 lattice was observed, with a single Hoc molecule at the center of each gp23* hexamer. The vertices are occupied by pentamers of gp24*: despite limited sequence similarity with gp23*, the respective monomers are similar in size and shape, suggesting they may have the same fold. However, gp24* binds neither Hoc nor Soc; in situ, Soc is visualized as trimers at the trigonal points of the gp23* lattice and as monomers at the sites closest to the vertices. In solution, Soc is a folded protein (~10% α-helix and 50-60% β sheet) that is monomeric as determined by analytic ultracentrifugation. Thus its trimerization on the capsid surface is imposed by a template of three symmetry-related binding sites. The observed mode of Soc binding suggests that it stabilizes the capsid by a clamping mechanism and offers a possible explanation for the phenotype of osmotic shock resistance. (C) 2000 Academic Press.

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Iwasaki, K., Trus, B. L., Wingfield, P. T., Cheng, N., Campusano, G., Rao, V. B., & Steven, A. C. (2000). Molecular architecture of bacteriophage T4 capsid: Vertex structure and bimodal binding of the stabilizing accessory protein, Soc. Virology, 271(2), 321–333. https://doi.org/10.1006/viro.2000.0321

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