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1.
Annu Rev Biochem ; 78: 723-42, 2009.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19489732

RESUMO

Single-particle electron microscopy (EM) can provide structural information for a large variety of biological molecules, ranging from small proteins to large macromolecular assemblies, without the need to produce crystals. The year 2008 has become a landmark year for single-particle EM as for the first time density maps have been produced at a resolution that made it possible to trace protein backbones or even to build atomic models. In this review, we highlight some of the recent successes achieved by single-particle EM and describe the individual steps involved in producing a density map by this technique. We also discuss some of the remaining challenges and areas, in which further advances would have a great impact on the results that can be achieved by single-particle EM.


Assuntos
Microscopia Eletrônica/métodos , Humanos , Microscopia Eletrônica/instrumentação , Complexos Multiproteicos/ultraestrutura , Proteínas/ultraestrutura , Vírus/ultraestrutura
2.
J Gen Virol ; 103(1)2022 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35082014

RESUMO

Viruses pose a challenge to our imaginations. They exert a highly visible influence on the world in which we live, but operate at scales we cannot directly perceive and without a clear separation between their own biology and that of their hosts. Communication about viruses is therefore typically grounded in mental images of virus particles. Virus particles, as the infectious stage of the viral replication cycle, can be used to explain many directly observable properties of transmission, infection and immunity. In addition, their often striking beauty can stimulate further interest in virology. The structures of some virus particles have been determined experimentally in great detail, but for many important viruses a detailed description of the virus particle is lacking. This can be because they are challenging to describe with a single experimental method, or simply because of a lack of data. In these cases, methods from medical illustration can be applied to produce detailed visualisations of virus particles which integrate information from multiple sources. Here, we demonstrate how this approach was used to visualise the highly variable virus particles of influenza A viruses and, in the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic, the virus particles of the then newly characterised and poorly described SARS-CoV-2. We show how constructing integrative illustrations of virus particles can challenge our thinking about the biology of viruses, as well as providing tools for science communication, and we provide a set of science communication resources to help visualise two viruses whose effects are extremely apparent to all of us.


Assuntos
Viroses/virologia , Vírus/ultraestrutura
3.
Biochem Soc Trans ; 50(1): 95-105, 2022 02 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35076655

RESUMO

Viruses can be enveloped or non-enveloped, and require a host cell to replicate and package their genomes into new virions to infect new cells. To accomplish this task, viruses hijack the host-cell machinery to facilitate their replication by subverting and manipulating normal host cell function. Enveloped viruses can have severe consequences for human health, causing various diseases such as acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), seasonal influenza, COVID-19, and Ebola virus disease. The complex arrangement and pleomorphic architecture of many enveloped viruses pose a challenge for the more widely used structural biology techniques, such as X-ray crystallography. Cryo-electron tomography (cryo-ET), however, is a particularly well-suited tool for overcoming the limitations associated with visualizing the irregular shapes and morphology enveloped viruses possess at macromolecular resolution. The purpose of this review is to explore the latest structural insights that cryo-ET has revealed about enveloped viruses, with particular attention given to their architectures, mechanisms of entry, replication, assembly, maturation and egress during infection. Cryo-ET is unique in its ability to visualize cellular landscapes at 3-5 nanometer resolution. Therefore, it is the most suited technique to study asymmetric elements and structural rearrangements of enveloped viruses during infection in their native cellular context.


Assuntos
Vírus/ultraestrutura , Microscopia Crioeletrônica , Ebolavirus/metabolismo , Ebolavirus/ultraestrutura , Tomografia com Microscopia Eletrônica , HIV-1/metabolismo , HIV-1/ultraestrutura , Herpesvirus Humano 1/metabolismo , Herpesvirus Humano 1/ultraestrutura , Humanos , SARS-CoV-2/metabolismo , SARS-CoV-2/ultraestrutura , Vírus/metabolismo
4.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 87(22): e0121521, 2021 10 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34469200

RESUMO

Fomites can represent a reservoir for pathogens, which may be subsequently transferred from surfaces to skin. In this study, we aim to understand how different factors (including virus type, surface type, time since last hand wash, and direction of transfer) affect virus transfer rates, defined as the fraction of virus transferred, between fingerpads and fomites. To determine this, 360 transfer events were performed with 20 volunteers using Phi6 (a surrogate for enveloped viruses), MS2 (a surrogate for nonenveloped viruses), and three clean surfaces (stainless steel, painted wood, and plastic). Considering all transfer events (all surfaces and both transfer directions combined), the mean transfer rates of Phi6 and MS2 were 0.17 and 0.26, respectively. Transfer of MS2 was significantly higher than that of Phi6 (P < 0.05). Surface type was a significant factor that affected the transfer rate of Phi6: Phi6 is more easily transferred to and from stainless steel and plastic than to and from painted wood. Direction of transfer was a significant factor affecting MS2 transfer rates: MS2 is more easily transferred from surfaces to fingerpads than from fingerpads to surfaces. Data from these virus transfer events, and subsequent transfer rate distributions, provide information that can be used to refine quantitative microbial risk assessments. This study provides a large-scale data set of transfer events with a surrogate for enveloped viruses, which extends the reach of the study to the role of fomites in the transmission of human enveloped viruses like influenza and SARS-CoV-2. IMPORTANCE This study created a large-scale data set for the transfer of enveloped viruses between skin and surfaces. The data set produced by this study provides information on modeling the distribution of enveloped and nonenveloped virus transfer rates, which can aid in the implementation of risk assessment models in the future. Additionally, enveloped and nonenveloped viruses were applied to experimental surfaces in an equivalent matrix to avoid matrix effects, so results between different viral species can be directly compared without confounding effects of different matrices. Our results indicating how virus type, surface type, time since last hand wash, and direction of transfer affect virus transfer rates can be used in decision-making processes to lower the risk of viral infection from transmission through fomites.


Assuntos
Dedos/virologia , Fômites/virologia , Fenômenos Fisiológicos Virais , Bacteriófago phi 6/fisiologia , Bacteriófago phi 6/ultraestrutura , Fômites/classificação , Higiene das Mãos , Humanos , Levivirus/fisiologia , Levivirus/ultraestrutura , Envelope Viral/ultraestrutura , Viroses/transmissão , Viroses/virologia , Vírus/ultraestrutura
6.
Semin Cell Dev Biol ; 73: 199-208, 2018 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28851598

RESUMO

Microscopes are used to characterize small specimens with the help of probes, such as photons and electrons in optical and electron microscopies, respectively. In atomic force microscopy (AFM) the probe is a nanometric tip located at the end of a microcantilever which palpates the specimen under study as a blind person manages a white cane to explore the surrounding. In this way, AFM allows obtaining nanometric resolution images of individual protein shells, such as viruses, in liquid milieu. Beyond imaging, AFM also enables the manipulation of single protein cages, and the characterization of every physico-chemical property able of inducing any measurable mechanical perturbation to the microcantilever that holds the tip. Here we describe several AFM approaches to study individual protein cages, including imaging and spectroscopic methodologies for extracting mechanical and electrostatic properties. In addition, AFM allows discovering and testing the self-healing capabilities of protein cages because occasionally they may recover fractures induced by the AFM tip. Beyond the protein shells, AFM also is able of exploring the genome inside, obtaining, for instance, the condensation state of dsDNA and measuring its diffusion when the protein cage breaks.


Assuntos
Microscopia de Força Atômica , Proteínas Virais/química , Proteínas Virais/ultraestrutura , Vírus/química , Vírus/ultraestrutura
7.
Semin Cell Dev Biol ; 73: 145-152, 2018 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28774579

RESUMO

The archetypical protein nanoshell is the capsid that surrounds viral genomes. These capsids protect the viral RNA or DNA and function as transport vehicle for their nucleic acid. The material properties of a variety of viral capsids have been probed by Atomic Force Microscopy. In particular nanoindentation measurements revealed the complex mechanics of these shells and the intricate interplay of the capsid with its genomic content. Furthermore, effects of capsid protein mutations, capsid maturation and the effect of environmental changes have been probed. In addition, biological questions have been addressed by AFM nanoindentation of viruses and a direct link between mechanics and infectivity has been revealed. Recently, non-viral protein nanoshells have come under intense scrutiny and now the nanoindentation approach has been expanded to such particles as well. Both natural as well as engineered non-viral protein shells have been probed by this technique. Next to the material properties of viruses, therefor also the mechanics of encapsulins, carboxysomes, vault particles, lumazine synthase and artificial protein nanoshells is discussed here.


Assuntos
Microscopia de Força Atômica , Nanotecnologia , Proteínas Virais/química , Proteínas Virais/ultraestrutura , Vírus/química , Vírus/ultraestrutura
8.
BMC Genomics ; 21(1): 441, 2020 Jun 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32590932

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Viruses are the most abundant biological entities on earth and play import roles in marine biogeochemical cycles. Here, viral communities in the surface water of the East China Sea (ECS) were collected from three representative regions of Yangshan Harbor (YSH), Gouqi Island (GQI), and the Yangtze River Estuary (YRE) and explored primarily through epifluorescence microscopy (EM), transmission electron microscopy (TEM), and metagenomics analysis. RESULTS: The virus-like particles (VLPs) in the surface water of the ECS were measured to be 106 to 107 VLPs/ml. Most of the isolated viral particles possessed a head-and-tail structure, but VLPs with unique morphotypes that had never before been observed in the realm of viruses were also found. The sequences related to known viruses in GenBank accounted for 21.1-22.8% of the viromic datasets from YSH, GQI, and YRE. In total, 1029 viral species were identified in the surface waters of the ECS. Among them, tailed phages turn out to make up the majority of viral communities, however a small number of Phycodnaviridae or Mimiviridae related sequences were also detected. The diversity of viruses did not appear to be a big difference among these three aquatic environments but their relative abundance was geographically variable. For example, the Pelagibacter phage HTVC010P accounted for 50.4% of the identified viral species in GQI, but only 9.1% in YSH and 11.7% in YRE. Sequences, almost identical to those of uncultured marine thaumarchaeal dsDNA viruses and magroviruses that infect Marine Group II Euryarchaeota, were confidently detected in the ECS viromes. The predominant classes of virome ORFs with functional annotations that were found were those involved in viral biogenesis. Virus-host connections, inferred from CRISPR spacer-protospacer mapping, implied newly discovered infection relationships in response to arms race between them. CONCLUSIONS: Together, both identified viruses and unknown viral assemblages observed in this study were indicative of the complex viral community composition found in the ECS. This finding fills a major gap in the dark world of oceanic viruses of China and additionally contributes to the better understanding of global marine viral diversity, composition, and distribution.


Assuntos
Metagenômica/métodos , Água do Mar/virologia , Vírus/classificação , Vírus/ultraestrutura , China , Bases de Dados Genéticas , Estuários , Microscopia Eletrônica de Transmissão , Microscopia de Fluorescência , Filogenia , Vírus/genética , Vírus/isolamento & purificação
9.
Nat Methods ; 14(8): 805-810, 2017 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28628129

RESUMO

We report a method for serial X-ray crystallography at X-ray free-electron lasers (XFELs), which allows for full use of the current 120-Hz repetition rate of the Linear Coherent Light Source (LCLS). Using a micropatterned silicon chip in combination with the high-speed Roadrunner goniometer for sample delivery, we were able to determine the crystal structures of the picornavirus bovine enterovirus 2 (BEV2) and the cytoplasmic polyhedrosis virus type 18 polyhedrin, with total data collection times of less than 14 and 10 min, respectively. Our method requires only micrograms of sample and should therefore broaden the applicability of serial femtosecond crystallography to challenging projects for which only limited sample amounts are available. By synchronizing the sample exchange to the XFEL repetition rate, our method allows for most efficient use of the limited beam time available at XFELs and should enable a substantial increase in sample throughput at these facilities.


Assuntos
Algoritmos , Cristalografia por Raios X/métodos , Aumento da Imagem/métodos , Interpretação de Imagem Assistida por Computador/métodos , Imageamento Tridimensional/métodos , Vírus/ultraestrutura , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , Tamanho da Amostra , Sensibilidade e Especificidade
10.
Rev Med Virol ; 29(1): e2019, 2019 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30411832

RESUMO

Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) is the only imaging technique allowing the direct visualization of viruses, due to its nanometer-scale resolution. Between the 1960s and 1990s, TEM contributed to the discovery of many types of viruses and served as a diagnostic tool for identifying viruses directly in biological samples, either in suspension or in sections of tissues or mammalian cells grown in vitro in contact with clinical samples. The diagnosis of viral infections improved considerably during the 1990s, with the advent of highly sensitive techniques, such as enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and PCR, rendering TEM obsolete for this purpose. However, the last 20 years have demonstrated the utility of this technique in particular situations, due to its "catch-all" nature, making diagnosis possible through visualization of the virus, without the need of prior assumptions about the infectious agent sought. Thus, in several major outbreaks in which molecular techniques failed to identify the infectious agent, TEM provided the answer. TEM is also still occasionally used in routine diagnosis to characterize infections not diagnosed by molecular assays. It is also used to check the microbiological safety of biological products. Many biopharmaceuticals are produced in animal cells that might contain little-known, difficult-to-detect viruses. In this context, the "catch-all" properties of TEM make it possible to document the presence of viruses or virus-like particles in these products.


Assuntos
Contenção de Riscos Biológicos/métodos , Testes Diagnósticos de Rotina/métodos , Microscopia Eletrônica de Transmissão/métodos , Vírion/ultraestrutura , Viroses/diagnóstico , Vírus/isolamento & purificação , Animais , Transmissão de Doença Infecciosa/prevenção & controle , Humanos , Tecnologia Farmacêutica/métodos , Vírus/ultraestrutura
11.
Biotechnol Lett ; 41(10): 1105-1110, 2019 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31407133

RESUMO

Atomic force microscopy (AFM) is a sophisticated imaging tool with nanoscale resolution that is widely used in structural biology, cell biology, and material science, among other fields. However, to date it has rarely been applied to the study of aquatic animals, especially on one of the main cultured species, shrimp. One reason for this is that no shrimp cell line established until now, primary cell is fragile and difficult to be studied under AFM. In this study, we used AFM to image three different types of biological material from shrimp (Litopenaeus vannamei) in air, including hemocytes and two associated pathogens. Without obvious deformations when the cells were imaged in air and in the case for the haemocytes and the cells were fixed as well. The result suggests hydrophobic glass coverslips are a suitable substrate for adhesion of these samples. The method described here can be applied to the preparation of other fragile biological samples from aquatic animals for high-resolution analyses of host-pathogen interactions and other basic physiological processes.


Assuntos
Células/ultraestrutura , Processamento de Imagem Assistida por Computador/métodos , Microscopia de Força Atômica/métodos , Penaeidae/ultraestrutura , Animais , Bactérias/ultraestrutura , Células/microbiologia , Células/virologia , Penaeidae/microbiologia , Penaeidae/virologia , Vírus/ultraestrutura
12.
Adv Exp Med Biol ; 1215: 159-179, 2019.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31317500

RESUMO

Atomic force microscopy employs a nanometric tip located at the end of a micro-cantilever to probe surface-mounted samples at nanometer resolution. Because the technique can also work in a liquid environment it offers unique possibilities to study individual viruses under conditions that mimic their natural milieu. Here, we review how AFM imaging can be used to study the surface structure of viruses including that of viruses lacking a well-defined symmetry. Beyond imaging, AFM enables the manipulation of single viruses by force spectroscopy experiments. Pulling experiments can provide information about the early events of virus-host interaction between the viral fibers and the cell membrane receptors. Pushing experiments measure the mechanical response of the viral capsid and its contents and can be used to show how virus maturation and exposure to different pH values change the mechanical response of the viruses and the interaction between the capsid and genome. Finally, we discuss how studying capsid rupture and self-healing events offers insight in virus uncoating pathways.


Assuntos
Microscopia de Força Atômica , Vírus , Capsídeo/química , Capsídeo/ultraestrutura , Proteínas do Capsídeo/química , Proteínas do Capsídeo/ultraestrutura , Vírus/ultraestrutura
13.
J Hist Biol ; 52(1): 125-160, 2019 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29926225

RESUMO

This paper examines the vital role played by electron microscopy toward the modern definition of viruses, as formulated in the late 1950s. Before the 1930s viruses could neither be visualized by available technologies nor grown in artificial media. As such they were usually identified by their ability to cause diseases in their hosts and defined in such negative terms as "ultramicroscopic" or invisible infectious agents that could not be cultivated outside living cells. The invention of the electron microscope, with magnification and resolution powers several orders of magnitude better than that of optical instruments, opened up possibilities for biological applications. The hitherto invisible viruses lent themselves especially well to investigation with this new instrument. We first offer a historical consideration of the development of the instrument and, more significantly, advances in techniques for preparing and observing specimens that turned the electron microscope into a routine biological tool. We then describe the ways in which the electron microscopic images, or micrographs, functioned as forms of new knowledge about viruses and resulted in a paradigm shift in the very definition of these entities. Micrographs were not mere illustrations since they did the work for the electron microscopists. Drawing extensively on primary publications, we adduce the role of the new instrument in understanding the so-called eclipse phase in virus multiplication and the unexpected spinoffs of data from electron microscopy in naming and classifying viruses. Thus, we show that electron microscopy functioned not only to provide evidence, but also arguments in facilitating a reordering of the world that it brought into the visual realm.


Assuntos
Microscopia Eletrônica/história , Virologia/história , Vírus/ultraestrutura , Artefatos , Bacteriófagos/fisiologia , Bacteriófagos/ultraestrutura , História do Século XX , Microscopia Eletrônica/instrumentação , Fenômenos Fisiológicos Virais , Vírus/classificação
14.
J Virol ; 91(8)2017 04 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28122979

RESUMO

Viral capsids ensure viral genome integrity by protecting the enclosed nucleic acids. Interactions between the genome and capsid and between individual capsid proteins (i.e., capsid architecture) are intimate and are expected to be characterized by strong evolutionary conservation. For this reason, a capsid structure-based viral classification has been proposed as a way to bring order to the viral universe. The seeming lack of sufficient sequence similarity to reproduce this classification has made it difficult to reject structural convergence as the basis for the classification. We reinvestigate whether the structure-based classification for viral coat proteins making icosahedral virus capsids is in fact supported by previously undetected sequence similarity. Since codon choices can influence nascent protein folding cotranslationally, we searched for both amino acid and nucleotide sequence similarity. To demonstrate the sensitivity of the approach, we identify a candidate gene for the pandoravirus capsid protein. We show that the structure-based classification is strongly supported by amino acid and also nucleotide sequence similarities, suggesting that the similarities are due to common descent. The correspondence between structure-based and sequence-based analyses of the same proteins shown here allow them to be used in future analyses of the relationship between linear sequence information and macromolecular function, as well as between linear sequence and protein folds.IMPORTANCE Viral capsids protect nucleic acid genomes, which in turn encode capsid proteins. This tight coupling of protein shell and nucleic acids, together with strong functional constraints on capsid protein folding and architecture, leads to the hypothesis that capsid protein-coding nucleotide sequences may retain signatures of ancient viral evolution. We have been able to show that this is indeed the case, using the major capsid proteins of viruses forming icosahedral capsids. Importantly, we detected similarity at the nucleotide level between capsid protein-coding regions from viruses infecting cells belonging to all three domains of life, reproducing a previously established structure-based classification of icosahedral viral capsids.


Assuntos
Proteínas do Capsídeo/química , Proteínas do Capsídeo/genética , Homologia de Sequência de Aminoácidos , Homologia de Sequência do Ácido Nucleico , Vírus/classificação , Análise por Conglomerados , Conformação Proteica , Vírus/genética , Vírus/ultraestrutura
15.
Biochem Soc Trans ; 45(2): 499-511, 2017 04 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28408490

RESUMO

Microscopes are used to characterize small objects with the help of probes that interact with the specimen, such as photons and electrons in optical and electron microscopies, respectively. In atomic force microscopy (AFM), the probe is a nanometric tip located at the end of a microcantilever which palpates the specimen under study just as a blind person manages a walking stick. In this way, AFM allows obtaining nanometric resolution images of individual protein shells, such as viruses, in a liquid milieu. Beyond imaging, AFM also enables not only the manipulation of single protein cages, but also the characterization of every physicochemical property capable of inducing any measurable mechanical perturbation to the microcantilever that holds the tip. In the present revision, we start revising some recipes for adsorbing protein shells on surfaces. Then, we describe several AFM approaches to study individual protein cages, ranging from imaging to spectroscopic methodologies devoted to extracting physical information, such as mechanical and electrostatic properties. We also explain how a convenient combination of AFM and fluorescence methodologies entails monitoring genome release from individual viral shells during mechanical unpacking.


Assuntos
Proteínas Virais/metabolismo , Vírus/ultraestrutura , Adsorção , Fenômenos Biomecânicos , Genoma Viral , Microscopia de Força Atômica/métodos , Vírus/genética
16.
Phys Rev Lett ; 119(15): 158102, 2017 Oct 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29077445

RESUMO

We use extremely bright and ultrashort pulses from an x-ray free-electron laser (XFEL) to measure correlations in x rays scattered from individual bioparticles. This allows us to go beyond the traditional crystallography and single-particle imaging approaches for structure investigations. We employ angular correlations to recover the three-dimensional (3D) structure of nanoscale viruses from x-ray diffraction data measured at the Linac Coherent Light Source. Correlations provide us with a comprehensive structural fingerprint of a 3D virus, which we use both for model-based and ab initio structure recovery. The analyses reveal a clear indication that the structure of the viruses deviates from the expected perfect icosahedral symmetry. Our results anticipate exciting opportunities for XFEL studies of the structure and dynamics of nanoscale objects by means of angular correlations.


Assuntos
Vírus/ultraestrutura , Difração de Raios X , Lasers , Radiografia , Vírus/química
17.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 111(8): 2920-5, 2014 Feb 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24516137

RESUMO

The three known classes of convex polyhedron with equal edge lengths and polyhedral symmetry--tetrahedral, octahedral, and icosahedral--are the 5 Platonic polyhedra, the 13 Archimedean polyhedra--including the truncated icosahedron or soccer ball--and the 2 rhombic polyhedra reported by Johannes Kepler in 1611. (Some carbon fullerenes, inorganic cages, icosahedral viruses, geodesic structures, and protein complexes resemble these fundamental shapes.) Here we add a fourth class, "Goldberg polyhedra," which are also convex and equilateral. We begin by decorating each of the triangular facets of a tetrahedron, an octahedron, or an icosahedron with the T vertices and connecting edges of a "Goldberg triangle." We obtain the unique set of internal angles in each planar face of each polyhedron by solving a system of n equations and n variables, where the equations set the dihedral angle discrepancy about different types of edge to zero, and the variables are a subset of the internal angles in 6gons. Like the faces in Kepler's rhombic polyhedra, the 6gon faces in Goldberg polyhedra are equilateral and planar but not equiangular. We show that there is just a single tetrahedral Goldberg polyhedron, a single octahedral one, and a systematic, countable infinity of icosahedral ones, one for each Goldberg triangle. Unlike carbon fullerenes and faceted viruses, the icosahedral Goldberg polyhedra are nearly spherical. The reasoning and techniques presented here will enable discovery of still more classes of convex equilateral polyhedra with polyhedral symmetry.


Assuntos
Fulerenos/química , Matemática/métodos , Modelos Teóricos , Conformação Molecular , Vírus/ultraestrutura
18.
J Struct Biol ; 196(3): 407-413, 2016 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27623229

RESUMO

Iterative projection algorithms are proposed as a tool for ab initio phasing in virus crystallography. The good global convergence properties of these algorithms, coupled with the spherical shape and high structural redundancy of icosahedral viruses, allows high resolution phases to be determined with no initial phase information. This approach is demonstrated by determining the electron density of a virus crystal with 5-fold non-crystallographic symmetry, starting with only a spherical shell envelope. The electron density obtained is sufficiently accurate for model building. The results indicate that iterative projection algorithms should be routinely applicable in virus crystallography, without the need for ancillary phase information.


Assuntos
Algoritmos , Cristalografia por Raios X/métodos , Vírus/ultraestrutura , Modelos Moleculares , Conformação Proteica , Vírus/química
19.
Proteins ; 84(9): 1275-86, 2016 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27231838

RESUMO

An improved algorithm for the calculation of the volume of internal cavities within protein structures and virus capsids as well as the volumes occupied by single amino acid residues were presented. The geometrical approach was based on atomic van der Waals radii. The results obtained with two sets of the radii, those proposed by Pauling and those determined by Tsai et al were compared. The main improvement compared with our previous approach is a more elaborate treatment of the regions at the very boundary of the cavities, which yields a more accurate volume estimate. The cavity volume of a number of Plant Pathogenesis-Related proteins of class 10 (PR-10) were reevaluated and the volumes and other geometrical parameters for about 400 capsids of icosahedral viruses were reported. Using the same approach the volumes of amino acid residues in polypeptides as mean values averaged over multiple conformations of the side chain were also estimated. Proteins 2016; 84:1275-1286. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.


Assuntos
Aminoácidos/química , Proteínas do Capsídeo/química , Capsídeo/química , Vírus/química , Algoritmos , Capsídeo/ultraestrutura , Interações Hidrofóbicas e Hidrofílicas , Conformação Proteica em alfa-Hélice , Conformação Proteica em Folha beta , Termodinâmica , Vírus/classificação , Vírus/ultraestrutura
20.
Soft Matter ; 12(3): 798-805, 2016 Jan 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26531814

RESUMO

The current work reports an intriguing discovery of how the force exerted on protein complexes like filamentous viruses by the strong interchain repulsion of polymer brushes can induce subtle changes of the constituent subunits at the molecular scale. Such changes transform into the macroscopic rearrangement of the chiral ordering of the rodlike virus in three dimensions. For this, a straightforward "grafting-to" PEGylation method has been developed to densely graft a filamentous virus with poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG). The grafting density is so high that PEG is in the polymer brush regime, resulting in straight and thick rodlike particles with a thin viral backbone. Scission of the densely PEGylated viruses into fragments was observed due to the steric repulsion of the PEG brush, as facilitated by adsorption onto a mica surface. The high grafting density of PEG endows the virus with an isotropic-nematic (I-N) liquid crystal (LC) phase transition that is independent of the ionic strength and the densely PEGylated viruses enter into the nematic LC phase at much lower virus concentrations. Most importantly, while the intact virus and the one grafted with PEG of low grafting density can form a chiral nematic LC phase, the densely PEGylated viruses only form a pure nematic LC phase. This can be traced back to the secondary to tertiary structural change of the major coat protein of the virus, driven by the steric repulsion of the PEG brush. Quantitative parameters characterising the conformation of the grafted PEG derived from the grafting density or the I-N LC transition are elegantly consistent with the theoretical prediction.


Assuntos
Proteínas do Capsídeo/química , Cristais Líquidos/química , Polietilenoglicóis/química , Vírus/química , Adsorção , Silicatos de Alumínio/química , Proteínas do Capsídeo/ultraestrutura , Microscopia de Força Atômica , Modelos Moleculares , Transição de Fase , Propriedades de Superfície , Vírus/ultraestrutura
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