Department of Structural Biology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.
mBio. 2017 Oct 17;8(5):e01579-17. doi: 10.1128/mBio.01579-17.
Large icosahedral viruses that infect bacteria represent an extreme of the coevolution of capsids and the genomes they accommodate. One subset of these large viruses is the jumbophages, tailed phages with double-stranded DNA genomes of at least 200,000 bp. We explored the mechanism leading to increased capsid and genome sizes by characterizing structures of several jumbophage capsids and the DNA packaged within them. Capsid structures determined for six jumbophages were consistent with the canonical phage HK97 fold, and three had capsid geometries with novel triangulation numbers (T=25, T=28, and T=52). Packaged DNA (chromosome) sizes were larger than the genome sizes, indicating that all jumbophages use a head-full DNA packaging mechanism. For two phages (PAU and G), the sizes appeared very much larger than their genome length. We used two-dimensional DNA gel electrophoresis to show that these two DNAs migrated abnormally due to base modifications and to allow us to calculate their actual chromosome sizes. Our results support a ratchet model of capsid and genome coevolution whereby mutations lead to increased capsid volume and allow the acquisition of additional genes. Once the added genes and larger capsid are established, mutations that restore the smaller size are disfavored. A large family of viruses share the same fold of the capsid protein as bacteriophage HK97, a virus that infects bacteria. Members of this family use different numbers of the capsid protein to build capsids of different sizes. Here, we examined the structures of extremely large capsids and measured their DNA content relative to the sequenced genome lengths, aiming to understand the process that increases size. We concluded that mutational changes leading to larger capsids become locked in by subsequent changes to the genome organization.
感染细菌的大型二十面体病毒代表了衣壳和容纳它们的基因组之间协同进化的极端情况。这些大型病毒的一个子集是巨型噬菌体,它们是带有双链 DNA 基因组的长尾噬菌体,基因组长度至少为 20 万碱基对。我们通过表征几种巨型噬菌体衣壳及其内部包装的 DNA 的结构,探索了导致衣壳和基因组大小增加的机制。为六个巨型噬菌体确定的衣壳结构与典型噬菌体 HK97 折叠一致,其中三个具有新颖的三角数(T=25、T=28 和 T=52)的衣壳几何形状。包装的 DNA(染色体)大小大于基因组大小,表明所有巨型噬菌体都使用全头部 DNA 包装机制。对于两个噬菌体(PAU 和 G),其大小似乎比它们的基因组长度大得多。我们使用二维 DNA 凝胶电泳表明,由于碱基修饰,这两个 DNA 异常迁移,并允许我们计算它们的实际染色体大小。我们的结果支持衣壳和基因组协同进化的棘轮模型,其中突变导致衣壳体积增加,并允许获得额外的基因。一旦建立了添加的基因和更大的衣壳,恢复较小尺寸的突变就会受到不利影响。一个由与感染细菌的噬菌体 HK97 具有相同衣壳蛋白折叠的病毒组成的大家族。这个家族的成员使用不同数量的衣壳蛋白来构建不同大小的衣壳。在这里,我们检查了极其大的衣壳的结构,并测量了它们的 DNA 含量与测序基因组长度的关系,旨在了解增加大小的过程。我们得出的结论是,导致更大衣壳的突变变化通过随后对基因组组织的改变而被锁定。