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THE RECEPTOR-BINDING PROTEIN P2 OF BACTERIOPHAGE PRD1: CRYSTAL FORM ITHE RECEPTOR-BINDING PROTEIN P2 OF BACTERIOPHAGE PRD1: CRYSTAL FORM I
Structural highlights
FunctionP2_BPPRD Adsorption protein. In association with P31 and trimeric P5, forms the spike complexes located at the 5-fold vertices of the capsid. Involved in recognition and attachment to the receptor on the surface of the host. Likely triggers the processes of vertex disassembly, membrane tube formation, and subsequent DNA injection. Essential for viral infectivity.[1] Publication Abstract from PubMedBacteriophage PRD1 is unusual, with an internal lipid membrane, but has striking resemblances to adenovirus that include receptor binding spikes. The PRD1 vertex complex contains P2, a 590 residue monomer that binds to receptors on antibiotic-resistant strains of E. coli and so is the functional counterpart to adenovirus fiber. P2 structures from two crystal forms, at 2.2 and 2.4 A resolution, reveal an elongated club-shaped molecule with a novel beta propeller "head" showing pseudo-6-fold symmetry. An extended loop with another novel fold forms a long "tail" containing a protruding proline-rich "fin." The head and fin structures are well suited to recognition and attachment, and the tail is likely to trigger the processes of vertex disassembly, membrane tube formation, and subsequent DNA injection. The receptor binding protein P2 of PRD1, a virus targeting antibiotic-resistant bacteria, has a novel fold suggesting multiple functions.,Xu L, Benson SD, Butcher SJ, Bamford DH, Burnett RM Structure. 2003 Mar;11(3):309-22. PMID:12623018[2] From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine. References
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