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An essential and highly selective protein import pathway encoded by nucleus-forming phage.

Chase J MorganEray EnustunEmily G ArmbrusterErica A BirkholzAmy PrichardTaylor FormanAnn AindowWichanan WannasrichanSela PetersKoe InlowIsabelle L ShepherdAlma RazavilarVorrapon ChaikeeratisakBenja-Min A AdlerBrady F CressJennifer A DoudnaKit PoglianoElizabeth VillaKevin D CorbettJoe Pogliano
Published in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2024)
The phage nucleus is an enclosed replication compartment built by Chimalliviridae phages that, similar to the eukaryotic nucleus, separates transcription from translation and selectively imports certain proteins. This allows the phage to concentrate proteins required for DNA replication and transcription while excluding DNA-targeting host defense proteins. However, the mechanism of selective trafficking into the phage nucleus is currently unknown. Here we determine the region of a phage nuclear protein that targets it for nuclear import and identify a conserved, essential nuclear shell-associated protein that plays a key role in this process. This work provides the first mechanistic model of selective import into the phage nucleus.
Keyphrases
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