نتایج جستجو برای: capsid protein

تعداد نتایج: 1243352  

2014
Udom Sae-Ueng Ting Liu Carlos Enrique Catalano Jamie B. Huffman Fred L. Homa Alex Evilevitch

Herpes simplex type 1 virus (HSV-1) and bacteriophage λ capsids undergo considerable structural changes during self-assembly and DNA packaging. The initial steps of viral capsid self-assembly require weak, non-covalent interactions between the capsid subunits to ensure free energy minimization and error-free assembly. In the final stages of DNA packaging, however, the internal genome pressure d...

Journal: :Journal of virology 2012
Josué Gómez-Blanco Daniel Luque José M González José L Carrascosa Carlos Alfonso Benes Trus Wendy M Havens Said A Ghabrial José R Castón

Cryoelectron microscopy reconstruction of Cryphonectria nitschkei virus 1, a double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) virus, shows that the capsid protein (60 copies/particle) is formed by a repeated helical core, indicative of gene duplication. This unusual organization is common to chrysoviruses. The arrangement of many of these putative α-helices is conserved in the totivirus L-A capsid protein, suggesti...

Journal: :Virology 1991
P X Guo S Erickson W Xu N Olson T S Baker D Anderson

Bacteriophage phi 29 of Bacillus subtilis packages its double-stranded DNA into a preformed prohead during morphogenesis. The prohead is composed of the scaffold protein gp7, the capsid protein pg8, the portal protein gp10, and the dispensable head fiber protein gp8.5. Our objective was to elucidate the phi 29 prohead assembly pathway and to define the factors that determine prohead shape and s...

2017
Emeline Vernhes Madalena Renouard Bernard Gilquin Philippe Cuniasse Dominique Durand Patrick England Sylviane Hoos Alexis Huet James F. Conway Anatoly Glukhov Vladimir Ksenzenko Eric Jacquet Naïma Nhiri Sophie Zinn-Justin Pascale Boulanger

Bacteriophage capsids constitute icosahedral shells of exceptional stability that protect the viral genome. Many capsids display on their surface decoration proteins whose structure and function remain largely unknown. The decoration protein pb10 of phage T5 binds at the centre of the 120 hexamers formed by the major capsid protein. Here we determined the 3D structure of pb10 and investigated i...

Journal: :Nucleic Acids Research 2006
Erik J. Slootweg Hans J.H.G. Keller Mark A. Hink Jan Willem Borst Jaap Bakker Arjen Schots

Lytic phages form a powerful platform for the display of large cDNA libraries and offer the possibility to screen for interactions with almost any substrate. To visualize these interactions directly by fluorescence microscopy, we constructed fluorescent T7 phages by exploiting the flexibility of phages to incorporate modified versions of its capsid protein. By applying translational frameshift ...

Journal: :Journal of virology 2011
Mindy Leelawong Dongsheng Guo Gregory A Smith

Following their assembly, herpesvirus capsids exit the nucleus by budding at the inner nuclear membrane. Two highly conserved viral proteins are required for this process, pUL31 and pUL34. In this report, we demonstrate that the pUL31 component of the pseudorabies virus nuclear egress complex is a conditional capsid-binding protein that is unmasked in the absence of pUL34. The interaction betwe...

Journal: :Journal of virology 2016
Laurie Ludgate Kuancheng Liu Laurie Luckenbaugh Nicholas Streck Stacey Eng Christian Voitenleitner William E Delaney Jianming Hu

UNLABELLED Multiple subunits of the hepatitis B virus (HBV) core protein (HBc) assemble into an icosahedral capsid that packages the viral pregenomic RNA (pgRNA). The N-terminal domain (NTD) of HBc is sufficient for capsid assembly, in the absence of pgRNA or any other viral or host factors, under conditions of high HBc and/or salt concentrations. The C-terminal domain (CTD) is deemed dispensab...

Journal: :The EMBO journal 2000
I Gross H Hohenberg T Wilk K Wiegers M Grättinger B Müller S Fuller H G Kräusslich

Assembly of infectious human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) proceeds in two steps. Initially, an immature virus with a spherical capsid shell consisting of uncleaved Gag polyproteins is formed. Extracellular proteolytic maturation causes rearrangement of the inner virion structure, leading to the conical capsid of the infectious virus. Using an in vitro assembly system, we show that the ...

2013
Kamel El Omari Geoff Sutton Janne J. Ravantti Hanwen Zhang Thomas S. Walter Jonathan M. Grimes Dennis H. Bamford David I. Stuart Erika J. Mancini

The hallmark of a virus is its capsid, which harbors the viral genome and is formed from protein subunits, which assemble following precise geometric rules. dsRNA viruses use an unusual protein multiplicity (120 copies) to form their closed capsids. We have determined the atomic structure of the capsid protein (P1) from the dsRNA cystovirus Φ8. In the crystal P1 forms pentamers, very similar in...

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