AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how the injection machinery and receptor binding proteins (RBPs) of bacteriophages, specifically Alteromonas mediterranea schitovirus A5, adapt through mutations and recombination to remain effective against evolving bacterial hosts.
  • It highlights that A5 shares its unique host recognition module with other seemingly unrelated phages, such as Alteromonas myovirus V22, despite differing dependencies on chaperones for producing active tail fibers.
  • The research suggests that structural changes in these proteins may play a role in their functions and indicates that the exchange of genetic material among different phages is possibly more frequent than previously thought, revealing a complex web of viral evolution.

Article Abstract

The host recognition modules encoding the injection machinery and receptor binding proteins (RBPs) of bacteriophages are predisposed to mutation and recombination to maintain infectivity towards co-evolving bacterial hosts. In this study, we reveal how Alteromonas mediterranea schitovirus A5 shares its host recognition module, including tail fiber and cognate chaperone, with phages from distantly related families including Alteromonas myovirus V22. While the V22 chaperone is essential for producing active tail fibers, here we demonstrate production of functional A5 tail fibers regardless of chaperone co-expression. AlphaFold-generated models of tail fiber and chaperone pairs from phages A5, V22, and other Alteromonas phages reveal how amino acid insertions within both A5-like proteins results in a knob domain duplication in the tail fiber and a chaperone β-hairpin "tentacle" extension. These structural modifications are linked to differences in chaperone dependency between the A5 and V22 tail fibers. Structural similarity between the chaperones and intramolecular chaperone domains of other phage RBPs suggests an additional function of these chaperones as transient fiber "caps". Finally, our identification of homologous host recognition modules from morphologically distinct phages implies that horizontal gene transfer and recombination events between unrelated phages may be a more common process than previously thought among Caudoviricetes phages.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10579305PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-42114-8DOI Listing

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