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Fine structure and assembly pattern of a minimal myophage Pam3.

Feng YangYong-Liang JiangJun-Tao ZhangJie ZhuKang DuRong-Cheng YuZi-Lu WeiWen-Wen KongNing CuiWei-Fang LiYuxing ChenQiong LiCong-Zhao Zhou
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2023)
The myophage possesses a contractile tail that penetrates its host cell envelope. Except for investigations on the bacteriophage T4 with a rather complicated structure, the assembly pattern and tail contraction mechanism of myophage remain largely unknown. Here, we present the fine structure of a freshwater Myoviridae cyanophage Pam3, which has an icosahedral capsid of ~680 Å in diameter, connected via a three-section neck to an 840-Å-long contractile tail, ending with a three-module baseplate composed of only six protein components. This simplified baseplate consists of a central hub-spike surrounded by six wedge heterotriplexes, to which twelve tail fibers are covalently attached via disulfide bonds in alternating upward and downward configurations. In vitro reduction assays revealed a putative redox-dependent mechanism of baseplate assembly and tail sheath contraction. These findings establish a minimal myophage that might become a user-friendly chassis phage in synthetic biology.
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