Ackermann H W
Department of Medical Biology, Faculty of Medicine, Laval University, Quebec, Canada.
Adv Virus Res. 1998;51:135-201. doi: 10.1016/s0065-3527(08)60785-x.
Tailed bacteriophages have a common origin and constitute an order with three families, named Caudovirales. Their structured tail is unique. Tailed phages share a series of high-level taxonomic properties and show many facultative features that are unique or rare in viruses, for example, tail appendages and unusual bases. They share with other viruses, especially herpesviruses, elements of morphogenesis and life-style that are attributed to convergent evolution. Tailed phages present three types of lysogeny, exemplified by phages lambda, Mu, and P1. Lysogeny appears as a secondary property acquired by horizontal gene transfer. Amino acid sequence alignments (notably of DNA polymerases, integrases, and peptidoglycan hydrolases) indicate frequent events of horizontal gene transfer in tailed phages. Common capsid and tail proteins have not been detected. Tailed phages possibly evolved from small protein shells with a few genes sufficient for some basal level of productive infection. This early stage can no longer be traced. At one point, this precursor phage became perfected. Some of its features were perfect enough to be transmitted until today. It is tempting to list major present-day properties of tailed phages in the past tense to construct a tentative history of these viruses: 1. Tailed phages originated in the early Precambrian, long before eukaryotes and their viruses. 2. The ur-tailed phage, already a quite evolved virus, had an icosahedral head of about 60 nm in diameter and a long non-contractile tail with sixfold symmetry. The capsid contained a single molecule of dsDNA of about 50 kb, and the tail was probably provided with a fixation apparatus. Head and tail were held together by a connector. a. The particle contained no lipids, was heavier than most viruses to come, and had a high DNA content proportional to its capsid size (about 50%). b. Most of its DNA coded for structural proteins. Morphopoietic genes clustered at one end of the genome, with head genes preceding tail genes. Lytic enzymes were probably coded for. A part of the phage genome was nonessential and possibly bacterial. Were tailed phages general transductants since the beginning? 3. The virus infected its host from the outside, injecting its DNA. Replication involved transcription in several waves and formation of DNA concatemers. Novel phages were released by burst of the infected cell after lysis of host membranes by a peptidoglycan hydrolase (and a holin?). a. Capsids were assembled from a starting point, the connector, and around a scaffold. They underwent an elaborate maturation process involving protein cleavage and capsid expansion. Heads and tails were assembled separately and joined later. b. The DNA was cut to size and entered preformed capsids by a headful mechanism. 4. Subsequently, tailed phages diversified by: a. Evolving contractile or short tails and elongated heads. b. Exchanging genes or gene fragments with other phages. c. Becoming temperate by acquiring an integrase-excisionase complex, plasmid parts, or transposons. d. Acquiring DNA and RNA polymerases and other replication enzymes. e. Exchanging lysin genes with their hosts. f. Losing the ability to form concatemers as a consequence of acquiring transposons (Mu) or proteinprimed DNA polymerases (phi 29). Present-day tailed phages appear as chimeras, but their monophyletic origin is still inscribed in their morphology, genome structure, and replication strategy. It may also be evident in the three-dimensional structure of capsid and tail proteins. It is unlikely to be found in amino acid sequences because constitutive proteins must be so old that relationships were obliterated and most or all replication-, lysogeny-, and lysis-related proteins appear to have been borrowed. However, the sum of tailed phage properties and behavior is so characteristic that tailed phages cannot be confused with other viruses.
有尾噬菌体有着共同的起源,构成了一个包含三个科的目,名为有尾噬菌体目。它们结构独特的尾部很是特别。有尾噬菌体具有一系列高级分类学特征,并展现出许多在病毒中独特或罕见的兼性特征,例如尾附属物和稀有碱基。它们与其他病毒,尤其是疱疹病毒,有着因趋同进化而产生的形态发生和生活方式方面的共同特征。有尾噬菌体呈现出三种溶原性类型,分别以噬菌体λ、Mu和P1为代表。溶原性似乎是通过水平基因转移获得的一种次要特性。氨基酸序列比对(特别是DNA聚合酶、整合酶和肽聚糖水解酶的比对)表明有尾噬菌体中频繁发生水平基因转移事件。尚未检测到共同的衣壳蛋白和尾部蛋白。有尾噬菌体可能起源于具有少数几个足以实现某种基础水平生产性感染的基因的小蛋白壳。这个早期阶段已无法追溯。在某个时刻,这种前体噬菌体变得完善。它的一些特征足够完善,得以一直传承至今。人们很想以过去时态列出有尾噬菌体当今的主要特性,来构建这些病毒的推测历史:1. 有尾噬菌体起源于前寒武纪早期,远早于真核生物及其病毒。2. 原始有尾噬菌体已是一种相当进化的病毒,具有直径约60纳米的二十面体头部和一条具有六重对称性的长非收缩性尾部。衣壳包含一个约50千碱基对的双链DNA分子,尾部可能配备有固定装置。头部和尾部通过一个连接体相连。a. 该颗粒不含脂质,比后来出现的大多数病毒更重,且其DNA含量与其衣壳大小成正比(约50%)。b. 其大部分DNA编码结构蛋白。形态发生基因聚集在基因组的一端,头部基因先于尾部基因。可能编码了裂解酶。噬菌体基因组的一部分是非必需的,可能来自细菌。有尾噬菌体从一开始就是通用转导噬菌体吗?3. 该病毒从外部感染宿主,注入其DNA。复制涉及多轮转录和DNA多联体的形成。新的噬菌体在宿主膜被肽聚糖水解酶(和一种穿孔素?)裂解后,通过被感染细胞的破裂而释放。a. 衣壳从一个起始点,即连接体开始组装,并围绕一个支架进行组装。它们经历了一个复杂的成熟过程,包括蛋白质切割和衣壳扩张。头部和尾部分别组装,随后连接在一起。b. DNA被切割成合适大小,并通过“满头部”机制进入预先形成的衣壳。4. 随后,有尾噬菌体通过以下方式多样化:a. 进化出收缩性或短尾部以及细长的头部。b. 与其他噬菌体交换基因或基因片段。c. 通过获得整合酶 - 切除酶复合体、质粒部分或转座子而变成温和噬菌体。d. 获得DNA和RNA聚合酶以及其他复制酶。e. 与宿主交换溶菌素基因。f. 由于获得转座子(Mu)或蛋白质引发的DNA聚合酶(φ29)而失去形成多联体的能力。当今的有尾噬菌体看起来像是嵌合体,但它们的单系起源仍体现在其形态、基因组结构和复制策略中。这也可能在衣壳和尾部蛋白的三维结构中显现出来。在氨基酸序列中不太可能找到,因为组成蛋白必定非常古老,以至于其关系已被抹去,而且大多数或所有与复制、溶原性和裂解相关的蛋白似乎都是借用的。然而,有尾噬菌体特性和行为的总和非常独特,以至于有尾噬菌体不会与其他病毒混淆。