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7QOL

Tail assembly of the phicrAss001 virion with C6 symmetry imposed

Summary for 7QOL
Entry DOI10.2210/pdb7qol/pdb
EMDB information14094
DescriptorPortal protein gp20, Muzzle protein gp44, Muzzle bound helix, ... (13 entities in total)
Functional Keywordscrassphage, bacteriophage, virus, dna virus, portal, connector, tail, ring, muzzle
Biological sourceBacteroides phage crAss001
More
Total number of polymer chains30
Total formula weight1654372.02
Authors
Bayfield, O.W.,Shkoporov, A.N.,Yutin, N.,Khokhlova, E.V.,Smith, J.L.R.,Hawkins, D.E.D.P.,Koonin, E.V.,Hill, C.,Antson, A.A. (deposition date: 2021-12-24, release date: 2023-03-29, Last modification date: 2024-11-13)
Primary citationBayfield, O.W.,Shkoporov, A.N.,Yutin, N.,Khokhlova, E.V.,Smith, J.L.R.,Hawkins, D.E.D.P.,Koonin, E.V.,Hill, C.,Antson, A.A.
Structural atlas of a human gut crassvirus.
Nature, 617:409-416, 2023
Cited by
PubMed Abstract: CrAssphage and related viruses of the order Crassvirales (hereafter referred to as crassviruses) were originally discovered by cross-assembly of metagenomic sequences. They are the most abundant viruses in the human gut, are found in the majority of individual gut viromes, and account for up to 95% of the viral sequences in some individuals. Crassviruses are likely to have major roles in shaping the composition and functionality of the human microbiome, but the structures and roles of most of the virally encoded proteins are unknown, with only generic predictions resulting from bioinformatic analyses. Here we present a cryo-electron microscopy reconstruction of Bacteroides intestinalis virus ΦcrAss001, providing the structural basis for the functional assignment of most of its virion proteins. The muzzle protein forms an assembly about 1 MDa in size at the end of the tail and exhibits a previously unknown fold that we designate the 'crass fold', that is likely to serve as a gatekeeper that controls the ejection of cargos. In addition to packing the approximately 103 kb of virus DNA, the ΦcrAss001 virion has extensive storage space for virally encoded cargo proteins in the capsid and, unusually, within the tail. One of the cargo proteins is present in both the capsid and the tail, suggesting a general mechanism for protein ejection, which involves partial unfolding of proteins during their extrusion through the tail. These findings provide a structural basis for understanding the mechanisms of assembly and infection of these highly abundant crassviruses.
PubMed: 37138077
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-023-06019-2
PDB entries with the same primary citation
Experimental method
ELECTRON MICROSCOPY (3.33 Å)
Structure validation

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