Publications by authors named "Priya Bondre"

The filamentous virus PH75, which infects the thermophile Thermus thermophilus, consists of a closed DNA strand of 6500 nucleotides encapsidated by 2700 copies of a 46-residue coat subunit (pVIII). The PH75 virion is similar in composition to filamentous viruses infecting mesophilic bacteria but is distinguished by in vivo assembly at 70 degrees C and thermostability to at least 90 degrees C. Structural details of the PH75 assembly are not known, although a fiber X-ray diffraction based model suggests that capsid subunits are highly alpha-helical and organized with the same symmetry (class II) as in the mesophilic filamentous phages Pf1 and Pf3 [Pederson et al.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The filamentous bacteriophage PH75, which infects the thermophile T. thermophilus, assembles in vivo at 70 degrees C and is stable to at least 90 degrees C. Although a high-resolution structure of PH75 is not available, the virion is known to comprise a closed single-stranded (ss) DNA circle of 6500 nucleotides sheathed by a capsid comprising 2700 copies of a 46-residue subunit (pVIII).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Filamentous phages consist of a single-stranded DNA genome encapsidated by several thousand copies of a small alpha-helical coat protein subunit plus several copies of four minor proteins at the filament ends. The filamentous phages are important as cloning vectors, vehicles for peptide display, and substrates for macromolecular alignment. Effective use of a filamentous phage in such applications requires an understanding of experimental factors that may influence the propensity of viral filaments to laterally aggregate in solution.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Head assembly in the double-stranded DNA coliphage HK97 involves initially the formation of the precursor shell Prohead I from approximately 420 copies of a 384-residue subunit. This is followed by proteolytic removal of residues 2-103 to create Prohead II, and then reorganization and expansion of the shell lattice and covalent cross-linking of subunits make Head II. Here, we report and structurally interpret solution Raman spectra of Prohead I, Prohead II, and Head II particles.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF