Previous Article | Next Article ![]()
Journal of Bacteriology, May 2002, p. 2833-2836, Vol. 184, No. 10
0021-9193/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.184.10.2833-2836.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Laboratory of Biochemical Genetics, National Institute of Mental Health,1 Section of Developmental Genetics, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 208922
Received 17 October 2001/ Accepted 22 February 2002
|
|
|---|
|
|
|---|
SP6 encodes a P22-like tail protein On the basis of the common upstream region of the tail genes of phages K1E, K5, and K1-5 and our belief that SP6 is very similar to these three phages, we speculated that SP6 may also share this similarity in the tail gene structure, so we designed a primer that would hybridize to SP6 DNA to sequence the SP6 tail fiber gene. As predicted, the primer did hybridize, and we were able to sequence the tail genes by primer walking. A 550-amino-acid open reading frame was found starting at the exact analogous position (with respect to the promoter) as the tail genes of K1-5, K5, and K1E. A BLAST (1) search found that this open reading frame shares a high degree of similarity (58% amino acid identity and 73% similarity) to the C-terminal 550-amino-acid portion of the 667-amino-acid salmonella phage P22 tail spike protein (10). The structure of the P22 tail spike has been studied extensively and serves as a model for protein folding. Like the K1-5 tail proteins, it has an enzymatic (endorhamnosidase) activity involved in degradation of the Salmonella O antigen (for reviews, see references 3 and 15).
The N-terminal 124-amino-acid sequence portion of the P22 tail spike protein was identified as the head-binding domain (12). This domain is conspicuously missing from the putative SP6 protein (Fig. 1A). Recently, a truncated version of the P22 tail spike missing the first 115 amino acids (resulting in a protein whose first amino acid corresponds with the second amino acid of the putative SP6 protein) has been used in studies of catalysis and receptor binding because it is more accessible to crystallographic analysis (2). Note that the SP6 protein is almost identical in size and contains the same regions as this stable, catalytically active, truncated P22 tail spike.
![]() View larger version (13K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 1. (A) Comparison of the putative SP6 tail protein and the P22 tail spike. The SP6 protein shares 73% amino acid similarity with the P22 protein but is missing the head-binding domain. (B) Comparison of the K1E/K1-5 endosialidase compared to the K1F endosialidase. Like the SP6 tail protein, the K1E/K1-5 protein is missing a potential head-binding domain compared to the K1F endosialidase. The N- and C-terminal portions of the proteins are indicated.
|
![]() View larger version (22K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 2. Arrangement of the tail gene regions of the K1-5, K1E, K5, and SP6 phages. All phages have a common upstream region with an SP6 promoter. Immediately downstream of this region, phages K1-5 and K5 encode the K5 lyase, K1E encodes the ORFL protein, and SP6 encodes a P22-like tail spike. All phages then have an intergenic region of 85 (84 for SP6) bases just after the stop codon. Immediately following this region, K1-5 and K1E encode an endosialidase, K5 encodes the ORFP protein, and SP6 encodes the small ORFN protein.
|
Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel analysis of cesium chloride-purified SP6 virions showed a protein with a molecular mass of about 58 kDa that comigrated with the overexpressed His-tagged protein (Fig. 3A). Western blotting was performed, using rabbit antiserum to phage P22 virions with the assumption that P22 antiserum would contain some antibodies to the tail spike that would cross-react with the SP6 tail protein due to the sequence similarity. In this experiment a band of the predicted molecular weight of the SP6 tail protein was seen in SP6 virions (Fig. 3B). The expressed SP6 protein also reacted with the rabbit anti-P22 serum. When P22 virions were run, a band of the predicted molecular mass of P22 tail spike (72 kDa) was detected. Since the antiserum was raised against whole phage P22 virions, a strong signal is seen for the major protein that we presume to be capsid protein. A strong signal is also seen in SP6 virions that we believe is a major capsid protein (based on its abundance). This SP6 protein may also be similar to the P22 counterpart, if not at the sequence level then perhaps at a structural level.
![]() View larger version (69K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 3. (A) Tris-glycine-sodium dodecyl sulfate-10% polyacrylamide gel stained with colloidal Coomassie blue (ICN). Lane 1, semipurified SP6 tail protein; lane 2, 5 x 1010 cesium chloride-purified SP6 phage particles. The arrow points to purified SP6 tail protein. (B) Western blot on nitrocellulose (Schleicher and Schuell) blocked with a solution of Tris-buffered saline, 0.02% Tween 20, and 5% nonfat dried milk. The primary antibody was rabbit anti-P22 serum, and the secondary antibody was horseradish peroxidase-conjugated goat anti-rabbit immunoglobulin G (Pierce). The signal was detected with Pierce SuperSignal extended signal substrate. Lane 1, 1010 SP6 particles; lane 2, 5 x 109 P22 particles; lane 3, partially pure SP6 tail protein. The top arrow points to P22 tail spike, and the bottom arrow points to SP6 tail protein.
|
Conclusions SP6, K1-5, K5, and K1E are all lytic phages with very similar virion morphology, have similar-sized linear double-stranded DNA genomes with the tail genes located at one end, and encode similar and highly specific RNA polymerases. We believe that these phages are all recently derived from a common ancestor and differ mainly in the tail proteins, giving them different host specificities. Furthermore, the cassette-like structure of the tail genes suggests that the phages can rapidly change or extend host specificity by acquiring new tail genes horizontally. Juhala et al. (6) describe morons, which may be mobile genetic elements in lambdoid phages. Morons are characteristically single genes flanked by a promoter and a Rho-independent terminator. The fact that the tail genes of these phages also have potential Rho-independent terminators suggests that this may be a common characteristic of mobile modules that are important for rapid phage evolution.
Since SP6 and P22 both infect the same host, it may not be surprising that they encode similar tail proteins. However, these two phages are biologically very different; P22 is a lambdoid phage that is capable of forming lysogens, whereas SP6 is a lytic phage. The entire P22 sequence is known, and no other sequence similarities exist between it and any known SP6 sequence. It is quite likely that the tail genes were acquired horizontally by one or both phages.
One question that needs to be addressed in the future is how the tail proteins attach to the head in the SP6 and K1-5 family. The SP6 tail is completely missing the head-binding domain of the P22 protein. Similarly, the K1-5 and K1E endosialidases are missing the N-terminal 205-amino-acid region compared to the endosialidase of phage K1F, a region that shares amino acid similarity with the T7 tail fiber protein which is also known to be involved in head binding (9, 13) (Fig. 1B). Since K1-5 was shown to have two different tail proteins attached to the head (11), it is not unreasonable to assume that head attachment is based on a different mechanism. It is possible that two polypeptides are required, one of which plays more of a structural role. It appears that there is another coding region downstream of the tail gene in SP6 (ORFN) that is identical to the first 11 amino acids of the K1-5 endosialidase (Fig. 4). This could be yet another tail protein giving SP6 the ability to infect some strain still to be identified.
|
View larger version (15K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 4. Sequence comparison of the ORFN protein of SP6 and the endosialidase (ENDO) of K1-5. The first 11 amino acids are identical. Identical amino acids (|), amino acids that are highly similar (:), and amino acids with lower similarity (.) are indicated between the two sequences. Gaps introduced to maximize sequence alignment (.) are indicated. It is possible that the ORFN protein is a tail fiber protein and/or could still play a structural role in attachment of the tail to the capsid.
|
|
|
|---|
This article has been cited by other articles:
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Copyright © 2009 by the American Society for Microbiology. For an alternate route to Journals.ASM.org, visit: http://intl-journals.asm.org | More Info»