(Received for publication, August 7, 1996, and in revised form, November 13, 1996)
From the Department of Biochemistry and the Molecular
and Cell Biology Graduate Program, University of Maryland Medical
School, Baltimore, Maryland 21201-1503 and the ¶ Biology
Department, Brookhaven National Laboratory,
Upton, New York 11973
Phage T4 terminase is an enzyme that binds to the portal protein of proheads and cuts and packages concatemeric DNA. The T4 terminase is composed of two subunits, gene products (gp) 16 and 17. The role of the small subunit, gp16, in T4 DNA packaging is not well characterized. We developed a new purification procedure to obtain large quantities of purified gp16 from an overexpression vector. The pure protein is found in two molecular weight forms, due to specific C-terminal truncation, displays in vitro packaging activity, and binds but does not hydrolyze ATP. gp16 forms specific oligomers, rings, and side-by-side double rings, as judged by native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and scanning transmission electron microscopy measurements. The single ring contains about eight monomers, and the rings have a diameter of about 8 nm with a central hole of about 2 nm. A DNA-binding helix-turn-helix motif close to the N terminus of gp16 is predicted. The oligomers do not bind to DNA, but following denaturation and renaturation in the presence of DNA, binding can be demonstrated by gel shift and filter binding assays. gp16 binds to double-stranded DNA but not single-stranded DNA, and appears to bind preferentially to a gene 16-containing DNA sequence.
Packaging of DNA into most dsDNA1
bacteriophage heads requires an enzyme, terminase, which interacts with
the portal vertex of the prohead and concatemeric DNA to form a
packaging machine. Terminases in most of the phages contain two
subunits. The large subunit generally has DNA-dependent
ATPase and endonuclease activities, whereas the DNA-binding specificity
resides in the small subunit (cf. Ref. 1). terminase specifically
binds and cuts at a unique cos site to leave 12-base 5
protruding complementary ends at both termini (2, 3). For phages P1 or
P22, the terminases bind and cut specifically near an initiation
packaging (pac) site and then generate nonspecific ends,
which result from processive headful packaging (4, 5). Although it was
first established in phage T4 that the mature DNA ends result from
headful packaging, in the case of T4 the mechanism of DNA end formation
in packaging is less well defined (6). In fact, the phage T4 terminase
displays many of the features of other phage terminases, including the small (gp16) and large (gp17) subunit structure (1, 7). Our genetic
studies implicate gp16, the small subunit of T4 terminase, in
amplifying a gene 17-gene 19 fragment. This is
achieved by recombination following alignment of two homologous 24-base
pair segments within gene 16 and gene 19 in T4
Hp17 (amplification) mutants. A synapsis model was proposed to
correlate this novel activity with the known role of gene 16 in initiation of DNA packaging and in controlling activity of gp17, the
terminase large subunit. This amplification suggests DNA binding
by gp16 whose sequence specificity remains to be assessed (8, 9).
ATP hydrolysis is required for phage in vitro DNA packaging
(1, 10). ATP not only provides an energy source for DNA translocation into the prohead, but also acts as an allosteric effector to control terminase holoenzyme specificity (11). terminase has two ATP binding sites, where the high affinity site is located in the large
subunit, and the low affinity site exists in the small subunit in which
a weak ATPase activity was detected (12-14). It is possible that ATP
binding to the terminase small subunit may serve mainly as an
allosteric effector rather than in energy transduction. Thus in the
Bacillus subtilis phage SPP1, the small subunit binds but
does not hydrolyze ATP (15). In T4, the large subunit showed DNA-dependent ATPase activity (7), whereas gp16 did not.
This is consistent with our present findings; weak ATP binding to gp16 is observed, but not ATP hydrolysis.
Many overexpressed small terminase subunits form high molecular weight
species. Overexpressed gpNu1 was found mainly in insoluble
aggregates, raising difficulties for purification as well as for the
study of DNA binding. This obstacle has been overcome by a well
established solubilizing method, followed by a subsequent renaturation
step (16). On the other hand, overexpressed T4 gp16
(Mr = 18,387; Ref. 17) is quite soluble,
although it chromatographs as a high molecular weight complex
whose structural properties were not characterized (7).
In this study, a new overexpression vector for production of gp16 at a higher level was constructed and a novel purification scheme was developed to obtain higher yields of pure active gp16. This report characterizes the DNA packaging activity, ATP affinity, and DNA binding properties of gp16, as well as the structure of the monomeric protein and of two specific oligomeric assemblies that it forms in vivo and in vitro.
An
XhoI-EcoRI fragment containing gene 16 and its ribosome binding site (RBS) as well as the T4 late promoter for
genes 16 and 17 (7, 17) was cut from plasmid
pR16, and inserted into a pET12a vector containing a 10 T7 promoter,
to make pL16 (Fig. 1). HMS174 (DE3) was transformed with pL16 and
induced at A600 = 0.4 by adding 0.4 mM IPTG at 37 °C for 4 h as described by Studier et al. (18).
Purification Scheme
IPTG induced HMS174 (DE3) bacteria containing pL16 from 2 liters of Luria Broth were collected by centrifugation at 4,225 × g for 10 min and resuspended in buffer A (20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.0), 1 mM EDTA, 0.5 mM DTT, and 0.1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (PMSF)). The suspension was then disrupted in a French press at a pressure of 20,000 lb. After centrifuging down the cell debris at 26,890 × g for 30 min, 5% (final concentration) streptomycin sulfate was added to the 30-ml supernatant. The supernatant was stirred for 20 min at 4 °C and centrifuged again at 26,890 × g for 30 min. Solid ammonium sulfate was slowly added to the streptomycin supernatant to reach 50% final concentration at 4 °C. After sitting on ice for 1 h, the insoluble material was collected by centrifuging at 26,890 × g for 1 h and was resuspended in 15 ml of buffer B (20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.0), 0.5 mM DTT, and 0.1 mM PMSF). Solid urea was added to reach a final concentration of 6 M after overnight dialysis against buffer B. The urea-denatured sample was loaded into a 10-ml Bio-Rad ceramic hydroxyapatite column, which was equilibrated with buffer C (buffer B + 6 M urea). After extensively washing with buffer C, a 0-10 mM sodium phosphate (pH 7.0) gradient in buffer C was developed. A Bio-Rad high Q column (5-ml cartridge) was equilibrated with buffer Q (50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 0.5 mM DTT, 0.1 mM ATP, 1 mM EDTA, 5 mM MgCl2, and 0.1 mM PMSF). The hydroxyapatite peak fractions were freed from urea gradually by dialysis against buffer Q containing, successively, 3, 1.5, 0.75, and 0 M urea. The renatured protein was loaded onto the High Q column, and a 0.10-1 M NaCl gradient was applied. The fractions containing gp16, as judged by SDS-PAGE, were collected and rechromatographed on the High Q column to remove high molecular weight contaminants. Except for the room temperature hydroxyapatite column, the remainder of the purification was performed at 4 °C on a Bio-Rad Econo System.
Preparation of Anti-gp16 Antiserum and Immunoprecipitation100 µg of gp16 was eluted from the gel according to Hager and Burgess (19). 20-30 µg of the eluted gp16 in phosphate-buffered saline was emulsified with an equal volume of Freund's complete adjuvant and injected into the rabbit subcutaneously. 20 µg of eluted gp16 in Freund's incomplete adjuvant was injected subcutaneously 3 weeks later. A subsequent booster, using 10 µg of gp16, was given similarly to the first one. Four days later, the antiserum was obtained and was able to interact with gp16 as judged by Western blotting. The preimmune serum was harvested prior to the first antigen injection from the same rabbit. 35S-Labeled late protein lysates from T4 wild type and mutants grown in a non-suppressor-containing strain were obtained according to Vanderslice and Yegian (20), except the labeling time was from 10-35 min after the first infection. 10 µCi/ml [35S]methionine (850 Ci/mmol) was added to the overexpression strain after a 10-min induction. A labeled gp16-containing bacterial lysate was harvested 50 min after the addition of the isotope at 37 °C. Labeled bacterial extracts were prepared immediately after centrifugation by boiling in SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis running buffer, and 15,000 cpm from each lysate was used to do immunoprecipitation with anti-gp16 antiserum according to the procedure of McNicol et al. (21).
ATP-photoaffinity Labeling and ATPase Assay20 µl of gp16
in 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.4), 10% glycerol, 6 mM
MgCl2, 5 mM DTT, 5 µM gp16, and
0.5 µM [-32P]ATP (800 Ci/mmol) was
incubated at 37 °C for 60 s. Then it was placed on parafilm
resting on an aluminum block on ice and irradiated with a General
Electric G15T8 15-watt germicidal UV lamp at a distance of 8 cm for 20 min. 1 µl of 50 mM ATP was added to stop the reaction.
After the addition of 10 µg of gp16 as carrier protein, 200 µl of
20% trichloroacetic acid was added and a precipitate was allowed to
form on ice for 1 h. After spinning at 23,500 × g
for 1 h, the pellet was washed with 1 ml of 20% trichloroacetic acid followed by acetone. Then it was subjected to SDS-PAGE,
dried, and autoradiographed (22). ATPase assays were carried out
by chromatography on polyethyleneimine-cellulose, followed by
autoradiography according to Debreceni et al. (23).
Analysis of oligomers of gp16 was performed at Brookhaven National Laboratory using the STEM facility. Freeze-dried specimens for mass analysis were prepared by the wet film technique (24). Briefly, samples in solution were deposited on thin carbon film, which had tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) as an internal control previously deposited on them. The samples were extensively washed with 20 mM ammonium acetate before being freeze-dried overnight. Stained specimens were prepared similarly except that the final wash was stain, which in this case was 2% methylamine vanadate (Nanovan, Nanoprobes, Inc., Stony Brook, NY), and the samples were air-dried.
Mass analysis of unstained freeze-dried specimens is possible because the number of scattered electrons collected by the annular detectors in the dark field mode is directly proportional to the mass thickness. An automated computer program (Automass) was developed by J. Wall to analyze the digital STEM data. By subtracting the background of the thin carbon supporting film, using an appropriate calibration (either determined from the control TMV present, or using the microscope calibration), the sum of the scattered electrons over the area of an individual particle gives its molecular weight. The Automass program selects TMV segments and particles to measure which fit a model (models) whose parameters have been chosen. Two different models were used to select the larger oligomer forms (see Table II).
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A 24-base ssDNA
oligonucleotide sequence (5-GAAGCTCATGATGCTCGTCAGAAG-3
) was
synthesized (Biopolymer Lab located at University of Maryland at
Baltimore Medical School). 10 pmol of DNA was labeled by
phosphorylation with bacteriophage T4 polynucleotide kinase (25). The
radiolabeled fragment was purified by Ultrafree-MC filter units, 5,000 nominal molecular weight limitation low binding-regenerated cellulose
membrane (Millipore), spun at 6,500 rpm (microcentrifuge) for 1 h.
100 µl of Tris-EDTA (TE) buffer was added, and the oligonucleotide was spun for another 1 h to wash free of radioactive
mononucleotide. The probe was resuspended in 30 µl of TE (pH
8.0).
A 215-base pair PCR product, made from pL16 with primer 22 (5
GAATGCGACAGTATTCATGG 3
) and primer 4 (5
AGATTTTATCCAATGAATTCCATCT 3
), which corresponds to the 3
end of gene 16 (8), was
isolated from 4% FMC Nusieve GTG agarose run in 1 × Tris-acetate-EDTA (TAE) buffer using a Qiaex gel extraction kit from
Qiagen Co. The DNA fragment was labeled by T4 polynucleotide kinase
(25) and was purified as the above except using Ultrafree-MC filter
units, 10,000 nominal molecular weight limitation low
binding-regenerated cellulose membrane.The labeled DNAs (8 × 10
8 µm ssDNA; 2.5 × 10
7 µm
215-base pair dsDNA fragment) were mixed with 2.7 × 10
3 µm denatured gp16 in 100 µl (final volume) of
buffer Q with 2 M urea and renatured by gradually dialyzing
away the urea from Q buffer containing successive urea concentrations
of 1, 0.5, 0.25, 0.125, 0.00125, and 0 M. The renatured
gp16 with or without the addition of anti-gp16 antiserum or preimmune
serum was run on an 8% native polyacrylamide gel in 1 × TAE in
the presence of ATP and Mg2+. The gel was dried and
subjected to autoradiography.
Plasmids pL16 and pET12a were radioactively labeled by nick translation (Amersham Corp.). Membrane filters (HATF) from Millipore were soaked in soaking buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 0.5 mM DTT, 3 mM ATP, and 1.5 mM MgCl2) for 30 min. gp16 was concentrated by 5% trichloroacetic acid precipitation on ice and washed twice with acetone. The dried pellet was redissolved to 10 mg/ml in 6 M urea in Q buffer. Aliquots of the 6 M urea-dissolved protein were pipetted into a series of microcentrifuge tubes. The protein was then gradually renatured by adding aliquots (sequential additions of the original volume) of the Q buffer to dilute the urea. When the protein was suspended in 2 M urea, 5 fmol of DNA probe (3000-5000 cpm) was added to each reaction tube in the final volume of 20 µl. By adding serial amounts of Q buffer, the protein and probe were renatured gradually by diluting the urea concentration to 1, 0.5, and 0.25 M at room temperature. The samples were then allowed to sit at room temperature overnight, and 1 ml of Q buffer was added the next day, mixed, and the mixture slowly filtered through the membrane at a speed of 2 ml/min on a Millipore filtration manifold. The membranes were washed once with 1 ml of 50 mM NaCl in 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5) and 2.5 mM EDTA. The membranes were air-dried and subjected to scintillation counting.
Protein and DNA Gel AnalysisA 12.5% SDS-polyacrylamide gel was used for the separation of the gp16 monomer, and an 8% native polyacrylamide gel was used for the DNA binding (band shift) measurements and for characterization of the oligomeric complexes. Polyacrylamide gels were run by standard methods (25). Electroblotting of SDS-PAGE for N-terminal sequencing was according to Bio-Rad, and N-terminal sequencing was done by the Macromolecular Resources Lab at Colorado State University. C-terminal sequencing of the purified gp16 (Q2, Table I) and of the two proteins separated by SDS-PAGE and blotted onto Teflon supports (26) was kindly performed by Dr. Jerome Bailey, Hewlett-Packard Co. Mass spectrometry was carried out on fraction Q2 at the Hewlett-Packard Co., Palo Alto, Calif. Protein concentration was determined by the Bradford assay (Bio-Rad).
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The in vitro T4 DNA packaging assay was according to Black (27) using gene 16amN87-amN67 rII deletion mutant-infected bacterial extracts containing ~2 × 109 proheads.
pL16 has three ATG and RBS sites
(Fig. 1): one in the NdeI site 5 to the gene
16 coding region, a second at the beginning of gene
16, and a third within gene 16 which initiates
translation of gene 17 at the five-codon, out-of-frame
overlapping region between genes 16 and 17. The
first 105 base pairs of gene 17 remain in the pL16 plasmid.
A truncated peptide is expected from the first ATG, since there are two
downstream stop codons before the second gene 16 ATG site.
Therefore, the overexpressed gp16 is expected to be synthesized only
from the RBS and ATG site for gene 16 found in the phage T4
DNA sequences. Optimal synthesis of gp16 from the expression vector was
assessed by Western blotting using an antiserum prepared against gp16
(data not shown). The overexpression level could reach about 5-10% of
the total protein (Fig. 2), which is much higher than
the previous
pL promoter driven overexpression plasmid, pR16 (7).
Following a new purification procedure of six steps (Fig. 1),
concentrated gp16 was obtained with about a 40-fold increase in
specific DNA packaging activity (Table I). In the final
High Q column, a 0.10 to 1.0 M NaCl gradient was applied
and the protein profile was followed by SDS-PAGE. The correspondence of
the protein (as measured by A280), gp16 (SDS-PAGE Coomassie Brilliant Blue R-250 stained for protein), and
activity profiles with an in vitro DNA packaging assay is given in Fig. 3. The new purification scheme, summarized
in Table I, gave us about 40% yield of active purified protein, 1% of the total protein, and more than ~95% purity was achieved.
The purified gp16 appeared as a closely migrating doublet band upon SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (Fig. 3B). 35S-labeled immunoprecipitates from pL16 and T4-infected bacteria also appear as a doublet in about the same proportions, i.e. the major gp16 component immunoprecipitated is the lower band (Fig. 3C). Both proteins yielded the predicted gp16 N-terminal sequence following blotting and microsequencing, MEGLDINK, strongly suggesting that both are gene 16 products. Mass spectrometry of the purified gp16 (Q2 fraction) that gave rise to the doublet showed a mixture of two components with masses of 18,406 and 17,513 Da, as compared to a DNA sequence (17) calculated molecular mass of 18,387 Da. The major C-terminal group was arginine, and the minor end group was the expected aspartic acid, which corresponded to the end groups found in the major lower band, and the minor upper band, respectively, following analysis of the electroblotted proteins (26). Loss of nine amino acids from the C-terminal end of the full-length protein would leave an arginine C terminus and yield a protein with predicted molecular mass of 17,448 Da. Therefore, a specific C-terminal truncation of a majority of the polypeptide chains apparently yields the two components detected after the purification (see "Discussion").
DNA Packaging ActivityThe activity of purified gp16 was
measured by an in vitro DNA packaging assay. Trace activity
(~2 × 103 plaque-forming units/ml) was present even
in the absence of gp16, since the small subunit is partially
dispensable for the packaging of mature DNA (7). The DNA packaging
activity of purified gp16 appeared to reach a plateau value at ~0.3
µg (0.33 µM) (Fig. 4). The activity
decreased slightly thereafter, possibly due to the presence of high
salt in the sample, or because the inactive oligomer is favored over
the formation of the gp16-gp17 holoenzyme. The purified gp16 contains
no endonuclease activity as measured (data not shown). The purified
protein is highly active, since a half-maximal yield of phage is
reached at a concentration of the purified gp16 of about 5.5 × 102 µM (0.05 µg). However, the enzymatic
activity measured in the lower concentration range is not linear with
respect to the amount of protein added. Probably, multiple copies of
gp16 are required to form an active packaging gp16-gp17 (terminase)
complex, which occurs below the 0.01 µg (1.1 × 10
2 µM) level and contributes to a
threshold stage (Fig. 4, inset). When gp16 and gp17 are
co-expressed, the gp17 and gp16 are found to be associated during
purification, although the association appears to be weak (7).
ATP-photoaffinity Labeling and ATPase Activity
ATP was
UV-cross-linked to gp16 (22), and the labeling was prevented by the
presence of 50 (and 500) µM non-radioactive ATP (Fig.
5, A and B). Without UV
irradiation, ATP was not able to cross-link to gp16 (data not shown).
We observed that the lower gp16 band (the major form) bound ATP less
well than the upper band. Unexpectedly, a ~50-kDa band appeared in
the protein-stained gel as well as the autoradiogram. Since the band
also appeared in the UV-irradiated sample containing protein without
the addition of any ATP, but was dependent upon UV irradiation, it
could be due to cross-linking of protein monomers to form multimers via tyrosine residues, which are in proximity in the gp16 oligomer. ATPase
activity was also measured in the presence and absence of dsDNA and of
1% Sarkosyl to dissociate the oligomers; however, no ATP hydrolysis
was detected even following overnight incubation with 10 µg of gp16
(data not shown). Of course, a gp16-associated ATPase activity could
appear when the protein is assembled with gp17 and proheads.
The Structure of the gp16 Oligomers
The purified gp16
fractions were run on an 8% native polyacrylamide gel. gp16 migrated
as two sharp high molecular weight complexes toward the top of the gel,
C1 and C2, with little or no detectable gp16 monomer (Fig.
6). The oligomers reformed from 6 M urea,
and were stable in 1 M NaCl, although Sarkosyl treatment released some monomer (Fig. 6, lane 9). The molecular weight
of the lower major band was judged from the polyacrylamide migration compared to standards to be in the mass range of 150-200 kDa. This
measurement is consistent with the STEM measurement of the complexes
(Table II).
Fraction 19 from the 8% native acrylamide gel was used to prepare
specimens for the STEM. Masses were determined on unstained, freeze-dried specimens, such as shown in Fig.
7A. The summary of the mass measurements is
shown in Table II. A histogram of the mass measurements (Fig.
8) shows that the mass distribution over 680 particles
is bimodal, suggesting that the sample contained at least two
populations of particles. One appeared quite round, possibly with a
hole in the center, indicated by single-headed arrows in
Fig. 7. The other was more rectangular and is indicated by
double-headed arrows. The mass determination suggests that the round particles are an oligomer of approximately eight copies of
gp16, whereas the other form appears to be approximately a dimer of
that.
While unstained freeze-dried specimens are necessary for mass measurements, fine structural details are often blurred because of radiation damage in the electron beam. Stained specimens were prepared from the same fraction 19. The hope was to see some symmetry in the round particles to better determine their oligomeric state. Fig. 7B shows the stained specimens. The single arrows point to round particles that are indeed rings. What was surprising was the structure of the larger particles, indicated by double-headed arrows, which appear to be two joined, interlocked, or side-by-side rings. The single rings can be seen in Fig. 7C. They are rings with a diameter of approximately 8 nm and a hole of approximately 2 nm diameter. There is no obvious symmetry. In stain, both forms appear slightly irregular and variable, which is what was seen in their mass measurements.
DNA Binding ActivityModified DNA filter binding and band
shift assays using a denaturation and renaturation process demonstrated
that gp16 binds to dsDNA. A 215-base pair DNA fragment corresponding to
the 3 end of gene 16 was used as a probe in a modified gel
band shift assay (see "Experimental Procedures"), which showed a
band shift only after gp16 in the presence of the dsDNA probe underwent
denaturation and renaturation, as compared to the reaction with the
oligomer (Fig. 9B, lanes 2 versus
1). In addition, a minor, slower migrating band (x in
Fig. 9B) always appears in the free dsDNA probe. Loop formation after denaturation and renaturation or bending could explain
the appearance of this minor component and its absence in lanes
2-4 (Fig. 9B) could be explained by greater
accessibility to contaminants in the purified gp16 or antisera. gp16
binding to DNA was enhanced by the presence of the gp16 antiserum,
which contributed to a band supershift (Fig. 9B, lane
4) that was absent when using the preimmune serum (Fig.
9B, lane 3). In contrast, a ssDNA did not show
any evidence of gp16 interaction using the same procedures (Fig.
9A), suggesting specificity for double-stranded DNA. The
band shift assay is not quantitative, and use of other DNA fragments
that did not correspond to gene 16 sequences also showed
band shifts under these assay conditions (data not shown).
When quantitative DNA filter binding assays were carried out, the
results supported the band shift assays in showing binding of gp16 to
DNA. By this method of detection, binding also requires the
denaturation and renaturation procedure. Binding to pL16 is stronger
than to pET12a, suggesting preferential binding to a gene 16 sequence (Fig. 10). Under such conditions, the binding occurs only when the molar ratio of protein:probe is over 10,000 and a
critical protein concentration is achieved. A comparable requirement
for high molar ratios of protein to DNA to observe DNA binding has also
been observed for other terminase small subunit proteins (see
"Discussion").
At its N-terminal end, gp16 contains a predicted helix-turn-helix
(H-T-H) motif, similar in structure and location to the putative DNA
binding motifs of gpNu1 and gp1, the small subunits of and SPP1
terminases, respectively. The gp16 sequence has the characteristic
signature pivot residues of a H-T-H structure, Ser7,
Gly11, and Ile17. This region of gp16 is
predicted to be
-helical (28). In addition, 60% homology with H-T-H
residues in other proteins in addition to conservative replacements at
other positions are observed (Table III).
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The DNA binding domains from and other proteins were
determined by crystallography or predicted by computer homology
search. Comparison of gpNu1 predicted an N-terminal DNA binding domain (29). A DNA binding motif of gp1 in phage SPP1 is well characterized, and the sequence also shows some similarities to gpNu1 (15). Therefore,
all three comparable molecular weight terminase proteins contain the
binding motif in the same N-terminal region, an unusual location among
H-T-H proteins.
T4 terminase is an enzyme that displays DNA-dependent
ATPase, DNA packaging, and endonuclease activities. The active
holoenzyme did not bind to single-stranded or double-stranded DNA
columns during purification, suggesting that other factors are required to activate DNA binding in vivo (7). The individual subunits display different activities. The large subunit gene apparently is
associated with nonspecific endonuclease activity and is toxic to the
host cells when overexpressed alone (30). Gene 16 reduced gene 17 toxicity and allowed its overexpression in a pL
promoter-containing plasmid (7). Possibly, gp16 modulates gp17 to
produce a more specific regulated endonuclease activity following
assembly into holoenzyme, as gpNu1 does with gpA in
(31).
Despite minimal sequence homology, phage terminases often display
similar organization of structural and functional domains. We observed
that the intact gp16 binds ATP more strongly than the truncated form,
which implies an effect of the truncation on the ATP interaction site.
The ATP reactive site was predicted to lie in the center of other small
subunits ( and SPP1) (14, 15) as well as in roughly the same region
of gp16, although the ATP consensus binding motif is more ambiguous in
gp16 (17). Clearly, the truncated gp16 also participates in oligomer
formation. The oligomerization may be due to highly hydrophobic
interactions in the central portion of gp16, according to the
hydropathy analysis (28), of two regions, amino acids 62-70 and amino
acids 73-80, which corresponded to the oligomerization central regions
of gpNu1 and gp1 of
and SPP1, respectively (15, 16). In phages
and P22, partially overlapping out-of-frame small and large terminase genes comparable to the T4 gene structure are also found (32).
The purified gp16 protein appeared as two SDS-polyacrylamide gel
electrophoresis bands with the same N-terminal sequence, but with
different C-terminal ends. From mass spectrometry measurement and
C-terminal analysis, the shorter, major component is specifically truncated at its C terminus by 9 amino acid residues as compared to the
minor full-length protein. The most likely mechanism for the formation
of the shorter gp16 is premature arrest in translation at the
overlapping gene 17. The ribosome binding site (5 AGAAGG 3
) for gp17 synthesis is located 1 nucleotide (nt) downstream of the
short form terminal arginine codon. A
1 frameshift at this site would
lead to a termination codon (UGA) immediately after the arginine codon.
Although truncation by specific C-terminal proteolysis by a
tryptic-type activity cannot be excluded, this seems unlikely because a
serine-protease inhibitor did not prevent formation of the truncated
gp16. Moreover, these two proteins are also synthesized in similar
proportions during a T4 infection analyzed without incubation of the
extract as determined by immunoprecipitation (Fig. 3C). The
interaction domain between gp16 and gp17 has not been identified.
However, in phage
, the C terminus of the small subunit interacts
with the N terminus of the large subunit (33). It could be that in T4
synthesis of the major truncated gp16 component accounts for the weak
association to gp17 during the purification of the holoenzyme if only
the minor full-length gp16 binds to gp17 (7). However, the biological
roles of the two gp16 proteins in vivo remain to be
tested.
Our present biochemical analysis of gp16 is compatible with the genetic
evidence suggesting a DNA binding role of this component of the T4
terminase (8). Most of the terminase small subunits are DNA-binding
proteins as is predicted from extensive genetic analysis (GpNu1 in ,
gp19 in T3, and gp1 in SPP1) (cf. Ref. 1). As already
discussed, several small terminase subunits, including gp16, contain a
predicted helix-turn-helix DNA binding motif. However, in order to show
DNA binding, a large excess of each protein has generally been required
in the binding reaction. In our DNA binding assay, we also used a very
high molar ratio of protein:DNA (>10,000-fold), and denaturation and
renaturation together with the DNA were also required to observe
binding in the gel band shift and filter binding assays. A threshold
concentration of protein was also required for the filter binding,
comparable to that observed for the SPP1 gp1 binding (34). In the case of SPP1, other factors were not required for DNA binding. In the case
of phage
, other DNA-binding proteins (IHF or HU) are required for
binding (35). From our analysis, the gp16 oligomer does not bind DNA
and the tendency of gp16 to oligomerize is very strong. We
suppose that other factors are also required to observe the T4
small subunit DNA binding in vivo; however, urea
denaturation allows a specific nucleoprotein complex to form in their
absence.
The native polyacrylamide gel and STEM analysis shows that the gp16 oligomer, far from being a nonspecific aggregate, consists of specific ring and double ring structures. The STEM measurements show that the oligomer is an ~8-nm ring with a ~2-nm central hole, with approximately eight subunits, on average, per single ring. In fact, this is the first close look at the structure of a terminase subunit. A comparable ring-like structure also appeared in the terminase small subunit of the B. subtilis SPP1 phage, although only single rings estimated to be decamers were observed (34). A number of possible gp16 interactions might account for the formation of the ring doublet. This structure should be relatively stable, since it apparently survives native gel electrophoresis. One possibility based on a single type of gp16 self-association is that the rings are helical, and that the ring doublet is a flattened two-turn helix, i.e. the rings and double rings are actually washers and double washers, where the latter has spread out due to weak stacking. How the T4 ring structures correlate with terminase function and DNA binding are interesting questions. We speculate that gp16 forms an analogous nucleoprotein complex with the DNA. The formation of ring dimers could correspond to the postulated synapsis of two homologous DNA fragments, serving either as a packaging signal or triggering the recombination event in vivo probably in conjunction with other host or phage accessory proteins (8).
Previous studies indicating that gp16 was not only involved in DNA packaging but also in the sequence-specific in vivo recombination of two homologous sequences, which results in the formation of multiple copies of terminase gene 17 and adjacent genes (8), suggested that the T4 terminase subunit recognizes a pac-like site for preferential packaging. In this work we did observe preferential binding to gene 16-containing plasmid DNA. Deletion of the pac-like sequence in gene 16-containing plasmid constructions also resulted in substantial decreases in T4 transduction of these plasmid DNAs.2 Taken together with the DNA binding studies reported in the present study, it appears that the small terminase subunit does bind preferentially to a sequence in its structural gene. Studies are under way to determine the extent of this binding specificity and the identification of other accessory factors required for this binding in vivo.
We thank Dr. J. Bailey, Hewlett Packard Co., Palo Alto, CA, for help in C-terminal sequencing and mass spectrometry measurement.