Ff phages

The Ff phages are filamentous phages that infect gram-negative bacteria bearing the F episome.[1] The term is used to refer to the closely related[2] group of phages including the f1, fd and M13 phages. The If1 and Ike phage[3] are also closely related to this group.

Inovirus
Virus classification
(unranked): Virus
Realm: Monodnaviria
Kingdom: Loebvirae
Phylum: Hofneiviricota
Class: Faserviricetes
Order: Tubulavirales
Family: Inoviridae
Genus: Inovirus

These phages undergo a non-lytic lifecycle, in which infected bacteria are not killed, but continuously release viral particles. This is in contrast to the lytic and lysogenic cycles of other phages where the host is killed when virions are released. The Ff phages have a circular ssDNA genome wrapped in a few thousand copies of the major coat protein to give a rod shaped viral particle that is capped on either end with two different sets of proteins. Only one end binds to the F pilus and can inject the DNA into the host cell.

Life cycle

Adsorption and Infection

Ff phages need the host cell to be Hfr or F+. When a virion binds to the sex pilus of a host by protein 3 in its beaded end, the pilus retracts and the virus fuses with the host membrane. Several host proteins are involved in this step and the genome of the virus is released into the bacterial cytoplasm.

Early life cycle and plasmid maintenance

The single stranded DNA of the virus is converted into double stranded DNA by the host machinery. This form is called the replicative form (RF). The strand which came from the virus (VS) is nicked by the viral protein p2 (pII).[4] Host DNA replication machinery then replicates the VS in a rolling circle form of replication by extending the 3' end of the nick, pushing out the 5' end as a single strand. P2 chops off the strand each time its extension completes a full circle and ligates the single stranded copy into a circle.[4] These ssDNA circles are converted to dsDNA like the original viral genome and the RFs accumulate in the cell. The RFs are transcribed and viral proteins accumulate. The RFs are passed on indefinitely to the daughter cells as plasmids.

DNA packaging and viral release

When sufficient copies of the RF and a viral protein p5 (pV / g5p) have formed, new ssDNA viral genomes get bound by p5 by interaction with a specific sequence on the DNA called the packing signal. This prevents its conversion to dsDNA. The interaction between the DNA and the p5 is weak except at the packing signal. The p5-DNA complex binds to a complex of viral and host proteins on the membrane. As the DNA is stripped of the p5, it is extruded across the membrane and wrapped in a helical casing of p8.

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See also

Filamentous bacterophage

References

  1. Rasched, I; E Oberer (December 1986). "Ff coliphages: structural and functional relationships". Microbiological Reviews. 50 (4): 401–427. ISSN 0146-0749. PMC 373080. PMID 3540571.
  2. Rohwer, Forest; Rob Edwards (2002-08-15). "The Phage Proteomic Tree: A Genome-Based Taxonomy for Phage". Journal of Bacteriology. 184 (16): 4529–4535. doi:10.1128/JB.184.16.4529-4535.2002. ISSN 0021-9193. PMC 135240. PMID 12142423.
  3. Peeters, Ben P.H.; Rik M. Peters; John G.G. Schoenmakers; Ruud N.H. Konings (1985-01-05). "Nucleotide sequence and genetic organization of the genome of the N-specific filamentous bacteriophage IKe: Comparison with the genome of the F-specific filamentous phages M13, fd and f1". Journal of Molecular Biology. 181 (1): 27–39. doi:10.1016/0022-2836(85)90322-5. ISSN 0022-2836. PMID 3981635.
  4. Peeters, Ben P. H; John G. G Schoenmakers; Ruud N. H Konings (1986-06-25). "The Gene II Proteins of the Filamentous Phages IKe and FT (M13, Fd and Fl) Are Not Functionally Interchangeable During Viral Strand Replication". Nucleic Acids Research. 14 (12): 5067–5080. doi:10.1093/nar/14.12.5067. ISSN 0305-1048. PMC 311511. PMID 3523440.
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