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Bacteriophages

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Title: Bacteriophages


1
Bacteriophages
  • The Importance of Bacteriophages

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2
Historical
  • Frederick Twort (1915) and Felix d'Herelle (1917)
    were the first to recognize viruses which infect
    bacteria, which d'Herelle called bacteriophages
    (eaters of bacteria). In the 1930s and subsequent
    decades, pioneering virologists such as Luria,
    Delbruck and many others utilized these viruses
    as model systems to investigate many aspects of
    virology, including virus structure, genetics,
    replication, etc. These relatively simple agents
    have since been very important in the development
    of our understanding of all types of viruses,
    including those of man which are much more
    difficult to propagate and study. They are still
    a paradigm for many areas of biology, especially
    gene expression.

3
Environmental
  • Bacteriophages, like bacteria, are very common in
    all natural environments and are directly related
    to the numbers of bacteria present. They are thus
    very common in soil and have shaped the evolution
    of bacteria.

4
Industrial/Economic
  • Phages of Lactobacillus are a serious problem for
    the dairy industry.Medical - phage typing (e.g.
    Staphylococcus) antibacterials -
    Flemming.Recombinant DNA vectors - cloning,
    expression, enzymes (T4 DNA ligase)

5
Diversity
  • There are at least 12 distinct groups of
    bacteriophages, which are very diverse
    structurally and genetically the best known ones
    are the common phages of E.coli

6
Replication
7
The Single Burst Experiment (Ellis and Delbruck,
1939)
8
The Single Burst Experiment (Ellis and Delbruck,
1939)
9
The Hershey-Chase Experiment (1952)
10
Bacteriophage T4
  • Family Myoviridae
  • Order Caudovirales

11
What is bacteriophageT4?
  • DNA is packaged in the head of T4 phage.
  • The tail shaft is composed of two concentric
    cylinders. The outer cylinder is called tail
    sheath, and it will contract upon infection.
  • The hexagonal baseplate is made of 22 kinds of
    proteins.
  • The tail fibers are responsible for recognizing
    the receptor in the outer membrane of the host
    cell.

12
Why is bacteriophage T4 a good research material?
  • totally determined nucleotide sequence
  • various mutants available
  • observable structural transformations by electron
    microscopy
  • various intriguing structures such as spherical
    structures, cylinder structures, fibrous
    structures, and so forth
  • available in vitro synthesis.

13
Morphology
  • Virions not enveloped tailed head. Head
    separated from tail by a neck, tail complex,
    consisting of a central tube and a contractile
    sheath, provided with a collar, base plate, 6
    short spikes and 6 long fibers. Nucleocapsids
    isometric to quasi-isometric elongated 65-115 nm
    in diameter (95-)111 nm long (65-)80 nm in
    diameter. Symmetry icosahedral. Nucleocapsids
    appear to be angular. 152 capsomers per
    nucleocapsid. Tail contractile (80-)113(-455) nm
    long 16 nm wide.

14
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15
when the bacteriophage T4 is assembled
  • no other helps are needed.
  • the proteins are interacting themselves by
    changing conformation.
  • No external energy is needed.

16
Nucleic Acid
  • Virions contain 48 nucleic acid. Virions
    contain one molecule of linear double stranded
    DNA.
  • Total genome length is 336000 nt. Double stranded
    DNA circularly permuted. Genome sequence has
    terminal repeated sequences. Guanine cytosine
    ratio 35 . Special nucleotides found in genome,
    are 5-hydroxy-methyl cytosine (instead of
    thymidine).

17
Structural protein
  • PDB Id1ocy
  • NameStructural protein
  • TitleStructure of the receptor-binding domain of
    the bacteriophage t4 short tail fibre
  • StructureBacteriophage t4 short tail fibre.
    Chain a. Fragment receptor-binding domain,
    residues 330-527. Engineered yes
  • Source Bacteriophage t4. Strain d. Expressed
    in escherichia coli. Expression_system_variant
    de3. Other_details variant as present in
    laboratory of s. Miller. Co-expression with gp57
    chaperone

18
Main view Bottom view
Right view
19
Virulent vs. Temperate Phages
  • Virulent phages do not integrate their genetic
    material into the host cell chromosome and
    usually kill the host cells (lytic infection)
    (e.g. T-phages of E.coli).
  • Temperate phages may integrate into the host DNA,
    causing LYSOGENY.

20
Virulent Bacteriophages
  • The archetypal virulent bacteriophage is T4 which
    carries a genome of 173 kb of linear ds DNA.
    During the early stages of a infection cycle T4
    nucleases encoded by socalled early genes degrade
    the chromosomal DNA of E. coli in order to obtain
    large quantities of nucleotide precursors for its
    own DNA syntesis.

21
Virulent Bacteriophages
  • For this mechanism to work T4 had to distinguish
    its own DNA from the host cell's by incorporating
    a modified base, 5-hydroxymethylcytosin which
    replaces the normal cytosin. In addition T4 also
    had to evolve genes and enzymes which reduce the
    large pool of dCTPs accumulating during the
    degradation of E. coli DNA. This is achieved by
    two other phage encoded enzymes called dCTPase
    and dCDPase generating dCMP which is unavailable
    for DNA polymerization.

22
Virulent Bacteriophages
  • E. coli however has evolved a defence mechanism
    against bacteriophage T4 infection by producing
    endonucleases encoded by a gene called rglA
    these enzymes are directed against DNA containg
    5-hydroxymethylcytosin. Bacteriophage T4 has
    responded to this challenge by glycosylating the
    above base via a glycolylase rendering the host's
    endonucleases useless.

23
Lyctic cycle of bacteriophage T4
24
Lyctic cycle of bacteriophage T4
  • The lytic cycle of the infection of E. coli
    starts with the adsorption of T4 to specific cell
    surface receptors which often consist of LPS
    Then the tail section contracts thus penetrating
    the relatively regid peptidoglycan cell wall of
    the bacterial cell. The DNA residing in the phage
    head is then injected into the interior of the
    bacterial cell. From then on a series of
    molecular events occur which lead to the
    formation of phage capsid (head and tail)
    proteins which assemble (together with the phage
    DNA) in a process known as maturation to form
    fully infectious phage particles.

25
Virulent Bacteriophages
  • The infection E. coli by bacteriophage T4 is a
    typical example of a host-parasite evolutionary
    race in which one partner tries to outsmart the
    other one by generating novel functions.

26
Virulent Bacteriophages
  • One final note Bacteriophage T4 does not encode
    its own RNA polymerase instead it successively
    modifies the existing E. coli RNA polymerase and
    in doing so alters its promoter specifities first
    to recognize the T4 promoters for the early genes
    (see above) and later in the infection cycle to
    transcribe promoters for the late genes encoding
    head and tail protein.

27
Lyctic cycle of bacteriophage T4
  • One of the phage proteins produced is lysozyme an
    enzyme which degrades peptidoglycan. This leads
    to a disintegration of the cell wall accompanied
    by a release of mature phage particles. The
    number of phage particles produced per infection
    cycle is known as the burst size. The diagram
    above gives an illustration of a lytic infection
    cycle but note that for T4-mediated infections
    the E. coli DNA (in the diagram as red circle) is
    actually degraded.

28
The Single Burst Experiment (Ellis and Delbruck,
1939)
29
The Single Burst Experiment (Ellis and Delbruck,
1939)
30
Lyctic cycle of bacteriophage T4
31
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32
Phage Genetics
  • TRANSDUCTION. There are two forms Generalized
    Transduction bacterial rather than phage DNA is
    packaged into a phage head. When another cell is
    infected, the bacterial DNA is injected and in a
    proportion of cases, may be incorporated into the
    chromosome by homologous recombination, replacing
    the existing genes. Frequency 105 - 108 per cell.
    More than one gene may be cotransduced - limit
    packaging size 50kbp 1 of bacterial
    chromosome.

33
Phage Genetics
  • Specialized Transduction Results from inaccurate
    excision of an integrated prophage some phage
    DNA is lost and some bacterial genes are picked
    up and carried to the next host - therefore phage
    are usually defective (non-infectious) and
    require replication-competent helper phage to
    replicate, depending on which phage genes are
    lost.

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35
Bacteriphage infection can be easily monitored by
placque formation. (in the lytic cycle, anyway)
36
THE END
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