Studies of the structure of the T4 bacteriophage tail sheath: I. The recovery of three-dimensional structural information from the extended sheath

Abstract The extended tail sheath of bacteriophage T4 has been used to study the transfer of information from an electron micrograph to the three-dimensional reconstruction obtained from it. Two methods have been developed to assess micrograph images of helical particles and their reconstructions. First, a filter has been designed which eliminates all structure in the image inconsistent with the symmetry and assumed radius of the helical particle. Individual micrographs can therefore be assessed with respect to their consistency with the assumed symmetry and radius, before reconstruction. Second, a map of the root-meansquare deviation of individual reconstructions from their average provides a quantitative measure of the consistency of the individual sets of tail data and allows the regions in the average reconstruction which are most sensitive to differences between the particles to be identified. The averaged reconstruction is used to examine the problems related to resolution and reproducibility of the structural information and to define the extent of the different components of the extended sheath.

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