Formation of bacteriophage MS2 infectious units in a cell-free translation system

Vladimir L. Katanaev, Alexander S. Spirin, Matthias Reuss, Martin Siemann*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

We show that a simple cell-free translation system from Escherichia coli, programmed with phage MS2 RNA, is able to infect F+ E. coli cells. The plaques appearing on the E. coli host strain are morphologically indistinguishable from those derived from normal phage MS2 infection. This effect is strictly translation-dependent, since an incomplete translation system or the system inhibited by antibiotics leads to no infection. The cell-free based infection is maximal under conditions favouring the highest synthesis of maturation protein (one of the four phage-encoded proteins). The infection is abolished when RNase A or trypsin treatment is included before addition of cells. Similarly, due to RNA and maturation protein degradation, the continued incubation of the translation mixture under protein synthesis conditions significantly decreases infectivity. These findings suggest the formation of 'minimal infectious units', simple complexes of MS2 RNA and maturation protein. Here we describe the first example of bacteriophage infectious unit formation directly performed in a cell-free translation system. A possible application of this phenomenon might be the construction of newly designed RNA vector delivery systems and, moreover, could be an approach for molecular evolution studies.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)143-148
Number of pages6
JournalFEBS Letters
Volume397
Issue number2-3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 18 Nov 1996
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Cell-free translation
  • In vitro phage assembly
  • Infectivity
  • Molecular evolution
  • Phage MS2 morphogenesis
  • RNA vector delivery system
  • RNA-protein interaction

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