Cell Reports (Aug 2017)

The Phage Nucleus and Tubulin Spindle Are Conserved among Large Pseudomonas Phages

  • Vorrapon Chaikeeratisak,
  • Katrina Nguyen,
  • MacKennon E. Egan,
  • Marcella L. Erb,
  • Anastasia Vavilina,
  • Joe Pogliano

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2017.07.064
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 7
pp. 1563 – 1571

Abstract

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We recently demonstrated that the large Pseudomonas chlororaphis bacteriophage 201φ2-1 assembles a nucleus-like structure that encloses phage DNA and segregates proteins according to function, with DNA processing proteins inside and metabolic enzymes and ribosomes outside the nucleus. Here, we investigate the replication pathway of the Pseudomonas aeruginosa bacteriophages φKZ and φPA3. Bacteriophages φKZ and φPA3 encode a proteinaceous shell that assembles a nucleus-like structure that compartmentalizes proteins and DNA during viral infection. We show that the tubulin-like protein PhuZ encoded by each phage assembles a bipolar spindle that displays dynamic instability and positions the nucleus at midcell. Our results suggest that the phage spindle and nucleus play the same functional role in all three phages, 201φ2-1, φKZ, and φPA3, demonstrating that these key structures are conserved among large Pseudomonas phages.

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