News Release

Study reveals structure of DNA packaging motor in virus

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Purdue University



Though further study is needed to analyze precisely how the DNA packaging motor functions, the scientists speculate it works something like this: As the virus enters a cell, it releases its genetic material, providing detailed instructions for the cell to make duplicate copies of the virus shell and motor structure. The cell also makes copies of the virus' DNA, which are fed into the newly developed shells by the DNA packaging motor. The newly assembled virus is then released from the host cell, and may then carry its genetic material to another host cell, causing infection and initiating the production of new viruses. (Purdue News Service Graphic courtesy of Clark Gedney)

Full size image available through contact

To view a Quicktime movie of the DNA packaging motor, click here. Requires Quicktime 3 or higher.

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - A detailed look at one of nature's smallest motors is providing scientists with new insights on how some viruses package their genetic material and reveals a new type of biological motor system.

Scientists at Purdue University and the University of Minnesota have solved the three-dimensional structure of the central component of a biological "motor" that powers the DNA packaging system in a virus, providing scientists with their first glimpse of such a motor system.

The study describes atom-by-atom how the core of the tiny motor, just millionths of a millimeter in size, is constructed and suggests how it works to translocate, or pack, long stretches of the virus' genetic material into its outer shell during the process of viral replication.

Details appear in the Dec. 7 issue of the scientific journal Nature.

"This study provides the first knowledge of a DNA packaging motor," says Michael Rossmann, Hanley Distinguished Professor of Biological Sciences at Purdue. "Though other motor systems have been studied in biology, this is the first motor known to translocate genetic material."

Viruses are essentially a simple parasite consisting only of an envelope that contains the genetic material ready for transportation from one host to another. They can reproduce only after infecting a host cell. Once inside a cell, the virus manipulates the cell's machinery to produce all the necessary components, including genetic material, to assemble new viruses. It is here that the biological motor is needed to fill newly assembled envelopes with their genetic material, Rossmann says. The new viruses are then released from the host cell and are free to infect other cells.

The study may provide clues as to how DNA is packaged in similar viruses - including Herpesvirus, which causes human ailments such as Herpes simplex, chicken pox and shingles - and suggest ways for developing drugs that prevent illnesses caused by viral pathogens.

The study also will provide scientists with new insights on how molecular motors work in biology, says Dwight Anderson, professor at the University of Minnesota.



This computer illustration (requires QuickTime 3 or higher) shows the arrangement of proteins that make up the Bacteriophage phi29 DNA packaging motor. The tiny motor is positioned at the entrance of the virus shell, and feeds viral DNA into the shell as new viruses are assembled in a host cell. (Purdue News Service Graphic courtesy of Clark Gedney and Petr G. Leiman)

Full size image available through contact

"The beauty of phi29 motor is that it provides a relatively simple system to investigate the mechanism of DNA packaging," Anderson says. "Working in a micro-droplet, or an area the size of a very small drop, the motor packages a DNA about 130 times longer than the viral shell, in just three minutes. The micro-droplet contains 50 billion DNA molecules that end-to-end constitute 200 miles of DNA, and each molecule gets packaged correctly into a protein shell."

In the study, Rossmann, along with Purdue researcher Timothy Baker and others at Purdue, and Anderson and his co-workers at Minnesota, used micro-imaging techniques - including X-ray crystallography and cryo-electron microscopy - to determine the structure of the DNA packaging motor in a virus called Bacteriophage phi29.

Bacteriophages are viruses that only infect bacteria. They are widely used in laboratory research because they are often similar in structure to human viruses. Phi29 infects a type of bacteria known as Bacillus subtilis.

The study shows that DNA packaging motor is comprised of three primary parts: an elongated prohead that serves as the virus shell, a doughnut-shaped connector that is positioned at the entrance to the virus shell and feeds DNA into the shell, and a novel ribonucleic acid (RNA)-enzyme complex that converts chemical energy to mechanical energy needed for packaging.

The scientists analyzed the structure of the connector - the core of the phi29 DNA packaging motor - to a resolution of 3.2 angstroms, or 3.2 hundred-millionths of a centimeter.

Their findings show that the connector is made up of 12 protein subunits that may serve as "cylinders" in the motor system to pull long chains of DNA through the center of the doughnut-shaped system.

Five identical enzymes, called ATPases, are positioned around the connector, just outside the opening in the virus shell. The enzymes break down the cell's chemical fuel, called ATP, to produce the energy needed to power the motor.

The researchers postulate that successive chemical reactions produced by the ATP cause the phi29 connector to oscillate and rotate, pulling the DNA into the shell two base pairs at a time.

"Our results suggest that the prohead and connector comprise a rotary motor, with the head and ATPase complex acting as a stator and the DNA acting as a spindle," Rossmann says.

Rotary-type motor systems are found in two other biological systems, he says, noting that such a motor is used to produce the rotation of flagella of E. coli. "The flagella rotate, and when they rotate synchronously, the bacterium can swim quite rapidly towards a source of food, or carbohydrates, along a concentration gradient."

The enzyme that manufactures ATP, called ATP synthase, also operates as a rotary motor to produce ATP or to pump protons.

The DNA-packaging motor appears to differ from these two known rotary motors, Anderson says, because its apparent spindle, the viral DNA, is translocated or moved to a new position.

"This motor system appears to be novel mechanistically," he says.

The scientists say they believe structural components of the motor and their concerted function can be dissected by further investigations.

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NOTE TO JOURNALISTS: An interactive animation of the phi29 DNA motor structure and a screen shot from the animation are available at the News Service Web site at http://news.uns.purdue.edu and at the ftp site at ftp://ftp.purdue.edu/pub/uns/. Copies of the journal article are available from Susan Gaidos, Purdue News Service, (765) 494-2081; sgaidos@purdue.edu.

The research was funded by the National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation and Purdue.

The research team at Purdue included Rossmann; Baker, professor of biological sciences; Alan Simpson, post-doctoral research assistant; Yizhi Tao, who received her doctorate at Purdue in 1999 and is now at Harvard University; Petr Leiman, doctoral student; Yongning He, doctoral student; Norman Olson, senior research electron microscopist; and Marc Morais, post-doctoral research assistant.

In addition to Anderson, the University of Minnesota team included research associates Mohammed Badasso and Shelley Grimes, and Paul Jardine, who was a postdoctoral fellow at the University of New Brunswick, Canada, and is now assistant professor at the University of Minnesota.

Source: Michael Rossmann, (765) 494-4911, mgr@indiana.bio.purdue.edu
Dwight Anderson, (612) 624-7989, dlander@tc.umn.edu
Writer: Susan Gaidos, (765) 494-2081; sgaidos@purdue.edu
Other sources: Timothy Baker, (765) 494-5645, tsb@bragg.bio.purdue.edu

Related Web site:
Structural studies at Purdue: http://bilbo.bio.purdue.edu/~viruswww/

ABSTRACT
Structure of the Bacteriophage phi29 DNA Packaging Motor Alan A. Simpson, Yizhi Tao, Petr G. Leiman, Mohammed O. Badasso, Yongning He, Paul J. Jardine, Norman H. Olson, Marc C. Morais, Shelley Grimes, Dwight L. Anderson, Timothy S. Baker, and Michael G. Rossmann

Motors generating mechanical force, powered by the hydrolysis of ATP, are used to translocate double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) into preformed capsids (proheads) of bacterial viruses and certain animal viruses. Here, we describe the motor that packages the dsDNA of the Bacillus subtilis bacteriophage phi29 into a precursor capsid. The structure of the head-tail connector, the central component of the phi29 DNA packaging motor, was determined to 3.2 angstrom resolution by means of X-ray crystallography. The connector was fitted into the electron density of the prohead and the partially packaged prohead determined by cryo-electron microscopy (cryoEM) image reconstructions. Our results suggest that the prohead plus dodecameric connector, prohead RNA (pRNA), viral ATPase, and DNA comprise a rotary motor with the head-pRNA-ATPase complex acting as a stator, the DNA acting as a spindle, and the connector as a ball-race. The helical nature of the DNA converts the rotary action of the connector into translation of the DNA.

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