The multi-layered cell envelope structure of Gram-negative bacteria represents significant physical and chemical barriers for short-tailed phages to inject phage DNA into the host cytoplasm. Here we show that a DNA-injection protein of bacteriophage Sf6, gp12, forms a 465-kDa, decameric assembly in vitro. The electron microscopic structure of the gp12 assembly shows a ~150-Å, mushroom-like architecture consisting of a crown domain and a tube-like domain, which embraces a 25-Å-wide channel that could precisely accommodate dsDNA. The constricted channel suggests that gp12 mediates rapid, uni-directional injection of phage DNA into host cells by providing a molecular conduit for DNA translocation. The assembly exhibits a 10-fold symmetry, whic...
In tailed bacteriophages and evolutionarily related herpes viruses, the portal protein is a central ...
2 p.-1 fig.In most bacteriophages, genome transport across bacterial envelopes is carried out by the...
DNA viruses such as bacteriophages and herpesviruses deliver their genome into and out of the capsid...
The multi-layered cell envelope structure of Gram-negative bacteria represents significant physical ...
The multi-layered cell envelope structure of Gram-negative bacteria represents significant physical ...
Bacterial viruses (or bacteriophages) represent nature’s most abundant form of life on earth. They p...
SummaryThe mechanisms by which most double-stranded DNA viruses package and release their genomic DN...
In many DNA viruses, genome packaging is initiated by the small subunit of the packaging terminase, ...
The mechanism of bacteriophage DNA injection is poorly understood, often considered a simple process...
Many icosahedral viruses use a specialized portal vertex to control genome encapsidation and release...
Sf6 is a double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) bacteriophage with a short, non-contractile tail. The tail is a...
From the abyss of the ocean to the human gut, bacterial viruses (or bacteriophages) have colonized a...
In order to initiate an infection, bacteriophages must deliver their large, hydrophilic genomes acro...
AbstractThe structure of the Bacillus anthracis spore-binding phage 8a was determined by cryo-electr...
In many bacterial viruses and in certain animal viruses, the double-stranded DNA genome enters and e...
In tailed bacteriophages and evolutionarily related herpes viruses, the portal protein is a central ...
2 p.-1 fig.In most bacteriophages, genome transport across bacterial envelopes is carried out by the...
DNA viruses such as bacteriophages and herpesviruses deliver their genome into and out of the capsid...
The multi-layered cell envelope structure of Gram-negative bacteria represents significant physical ...
The multi-layered cell envelope structure of Gram-negative bacteria represents significant physical ...
Bacterial viruses (or bacteriophages) represent nature’s most abundant form of life on earth. They p...
SummaryThe mechanisms by which most double-stranded DNA viruses package and release their genomic DN...
In many DNA viruses, genome packaging is initiated by the small subunit of the packaging terminase, ...
The mechanism of bacteriophage DNA injection is poorly understood, often considered a simple process...
Many icosahedral viruses use a specialized portal vertex to control genome encapsidation and release...
Sf6 is a double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) bacteriophage with a short, non-contractile tail. The tail is a...
From the abyss of the ocean to the human gut, bacterial viruses (or bacteriophages) have colonized a...
In order to initiate an infection, bacteriophages must deliver their large, hydrophilic genomes acro...
AbstractThe structure of the Bacillus anthracis spore-binding phage 8a was determined by cryo-electr...
In many bacterial viruses and in certain animal viruses, the double-stranded DNA genome enters and e...
In tailed bacteriophages and evolutionarily related herpes viruses, the portal protein is a central ...
2 p.-1 fig.In most bacteriophages, genome transport across bacterial envelopes is carried out by the...
DNA viruses such as bacteriophages and herpesviruses deliver their genome into and out of the capsid...