Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 2012 May 29
Garcia-Doval C, van Raaij MJ.
The six bacteriophage T7 tail fibers, homo-trimers of gene product 17, are thought to be responsible for the first specific,
albeit reversible, attachment to Escherichia coli
lipopolysaccharide. The protein trimer forms kinked fibers comprised of
an amino-terminal tail-attachment domain, a slender
shaft, and a carboxyl-terminal domain composed of
several nodules.
Previously, we expressed, purified, and crystallized a carboxyl-terminal fragment comprising residues 371–553. Here, we report the structure of this protein trimer, solved using anomalous diffraction and refined at 2 Å resolution. Amino acids 371–447 form a tapered pyramid with a triangular cross-section composed of interlocked β-sheets from each of the three chains. The triangular pyramid domain has three α-helices at its narrow end, which are connected to a carboxyl-terminal three-blade β-propeller tip domain by flexible loops. The monomers of this tip domain each contain an eight-stranded β-sandwich.
The exact topology of the β-sandwich fold is novel, but
similar to that
of knob domains of other viral fibers and the phage
Sf6 needle. Several host-range change mutants have been mapped to loops
located on the top of this tip domain, suggesting
that this surface of the tip domain interacts with receptors on the cell
surface.