Structure of epsilon15 bacteriophage reveals genome organization and DNA packaging/injection apparatus

Wen Jiang, Juan Chang, Joanita Jakana, Peter Weigele, Jonathan King, Wah Chiu

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

270 Scopus citations

Abstract

The critical viral components for packaging DNA, recognizing and binding to host cells, and injecting the condensed DNA into the host are organized at a single vertex of many icosahedral viruses. These component structures do not share icosahedral symmetry and cannot be resolved using a conventional icosahedral averaging method. Here we report the structure of the entire infectious Salmonella bacteriophage epsilon 15 (ref. 1) determined from single-particle cryo-electron microscopy, without icosahedral averaging. This structure displays not only the icosahedral shell of 60 hexamers and 11 pentamers, but also the non-icosahedral components at one pentameric vertex. The densities at this vertex can be identified as the 12-subunit portal complex sandwiched between an internal cylindrical core and an external tail hub connecting to six projecting trimeric tailspikes. The viral genome is packed as coaxial coils in at least three outer layers with ∼90 terminal nucleotides extending through the protein core and the portal complex and poised for injection. The shell protein from icosahedral reconstruction at higher resolution exhibits a similar fold to that of other double-stranded DNA viruses including herpesvirus2-6, suggesting a common ancestor among these diverse viruses. The image reconstruction approach should be applicable to studying other biological nanomachines with components of mixed symmetries.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)612-616
Number of pages5
JournalNature
Volume439
Issue number7076
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 2 2006

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • General

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