Bacteriophages were discovered 100 years ago because of
their ability to replicate in a pathogenic bacterium, kill it and thereby cure
the patient. As a small spaceship landing on the moon, the microscopic
particles land on the surface of the bacteria where they inject their deadly
genetic material.
In
fact, virus is nothing but small protein capsules enclosing the genetic
material. The virus cannot replicate without a host cell, which it hijacks for
its survival. During an infection, it utilises its host cell's metabolism to
make lots of copies of the virus, which are subsequently released, and infect
new host cells while the host cell dies.
An
international team of researchers from Denmark and Russia used a series of
biochemical and structural biology techniques to investigate how the Qβ
bacteriophage, which infects the common coli bacteria, utilises several of its
host cell's proteins while replicating its genetic material.
Immediately
after infection, Qβ releases its genetic material into the host cell, where it
is used as a template for the production of viral proteins. Qβ takes over the
host cell's protein machine to synthesise its envelope proteins, as well as a
virus-specific RNA polymerase, called a replicase. The task of the replicase is
to replicate the virus' genetic material, whereas the host cell's genetic
material is not to be recognised and copied. The replicase cannot cope with
this task on its own, so it hijacks three 'helpers' from the host's own
proteins namely the ribosomal protein S1, EF-Tu and EF-Ts, which all usually
play important roles for the host cell's protein machine.
In
a recently published work, the researchers have shown how ribosomal protein S1
plays a crucial role when the viral Qβ genetic material is to be distinguished
from the genetic material of the coli bacteria prior to the replication
process. Together, the replicase and S1 form a surface to which the viral
genetic material is likely to bind during the recognition process. If this
surface is mutated on the replicase, it loses its ability to accurately
recognise the virus genome, which has fatal consequences for the virus, which
can no longer replicate.
In
the future, these findings may form the basis for the development of new
methods for treating viral infections, as the majority of all virus faces a
similar challenge, namely to have to selectively replicate its own genetic
material in competition with the genetic material of the host cell. If this
strategy fails, the virus will lose its ability to spread to new host cells and
the infection will then be stopped.
The
international research team consists of researchers from the Department of
Molecular Biology and Genetics and the Interdisciplinary Nanoscience Center
(iNANO), both from Aarhus University in Denmark, and from the Russian Academy
of Sciences at Pushchino, Moscow, Russia.
News Source: Aarhus University
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