Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5675058 | Virology | 2017 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
In an earlier study, protein-based barriers to horizontal gene transfer were investigated by placing the bacteriophage G4 G gene, encoding the major spike protein, into the ÏX174 genome. The foreign G protein promoted off-pathway assembly reactions, resulting in a lethal phenotype. After three targeted genetic selections, one of two foreign spike proteins was productively integrated into the ÏX174 system: the complete G4 or a recombinant G4/ÏX174 protein (94% G4:6% ÏX174). However, strain fitness was very low. In this study, the chimeras were characterized and experimentally evolved. Inefficient assembly was the primary contributor to low fitness: accordingly, mutations affecting assembly restored fitness. The spike protein preference of the ancestral and evolved strains was determined in competition experiments between the foreign and ÏX174Â G proteins. Before adaptation, both G proteins were incorporated into virions; afterwards, the foreign proteins were strongly preferred. Thus, a previously inhibitory protein became the preferred substrate during assembly.
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Authors
Sarah M. Doore, Nicholas J. Schweers, Bentley A. Fane,