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Title: The receptor specificity of bacteriophages can be determined by a tail fiber modifying protein. Author: Riede I, Degen M, Henning U. Journal: EMBO J; 1985 Sep; 4(9):2343-6. PubMed ID: 3000773. Abstract: T-Even type bacteriophages recognize their cellular receptors with the distal ends of their long tail fibers. The distal part of these fibers consists of a dimer of gene product (gp) 37. The assembly of this gp to a functional dimer requires the action of two other proteins, gp57 and gp38. Genes (g) 38 have been cloned from five T-even type phages which use the Escherichia coli outer membrane protein OmpA as a receptor. The phages used differ in their ability to infect a series of ompA mutants producing altered OmpA proteins, i.e., each phage has a specific host range for these mutants. The cloned genes 38 complemented g38 amber mutants of phage T2, which uses the outer membrane protein OmpF as a receptor. The complemented phages had become phenotypically OmpA-dependent and, with one exception, OmpF-independent, but regained the host range of T2 upon growth in a host lacking the cloned g38. The host range of the complemented phages, as determined on the ompA mutants, was identical to, similar to, or different from that of the phage, from which the cloned g38 originated. The results presented show that gp38 from one phage can phenotypically 'imprint', in a finely-tuned manner, a host range onto gp37 of another phage with a different host specificity. In view of the extreme diversity of host ranges observed, it is suggested that gp38 of T2 and of the OmpA-specific phages may remain attached to gp37 in the phage particle and in cooperation with gp37 determine the host range.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]