A key but poorly understood stage of the bacteriophage life cycle is the binding of phage receptor binding proteins (RBPs) to receptors on the host cell surface, leading to injection… Click to show full abstract
A key but poorly understood stage of the bacteriophage life cycle is the binding of phage receptor binding proteins (RBPs) to receptors on the host cell surface, leading to injection of the phage genome and, for lytic phages, host cell lysis. To prevent a secondary viral infection by the same or a closely related phage, superinfection exclusion (SE) proteins can prevent the binding of RBPs via modulation of the host receptor structure in ways that are also unclear. Here we present the cryo-EM structure of the phage T5 outer membrane (OM) receptor FhuA in complex with the T5 RBP pb5, and the crystal structure of FhuA complexed to the OM SE lipoprotein Llp. Pb5 inserts four loops deeply into the extracellular lumen of FhuA and contacts the plug, but does not cause any conformational changes in the receptor, supporting the view that DNA translocation does not occur through the lumen of OM channels. The FhuA-Llp structure reveals that Llp is periplasmic and binds to a non-native conformation of the plug of FhuA, causing the inward folding of two extracellular loops via “reverse” allostery. The inward-folded loops of FhuA overlap with the pb5 binding site, explaining how Llp binding to FhuA abolishes further infection of E. coli by phage T5, and suggesting a mechanism for SE via the jamming of TonB-dependent transporters by small phage lipoproteins.
               
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