structural virology
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2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-21
Author(s):  
Mavis Agbandje-McKenna

The saying “It takes a village to raise a child” has never been truer than in my case. This autobiographical article documents my growing up and working on three different continents and my influencers along the way. Born in a village in Nigeria, West Africa, I spent the first 12 years of life with my grandmother living in a mud house and attending a village primary school. I walked barefoot to school every day, learned to read, and wrote on a chalk slate. At the age of 13, I moved to my second “village,” London, England. In secondary school my love of science began to blossom. I attained a double major in chemistry and human biology from the University of Hertfordshire and a PhD in biophysics from the University of London, with a research project aimed at designing anticancer agents. I was mentored by Terence Jenkins and Stephen Neidle. For my postdoctoral training, I crossed the ocean again, to the United States, my third “village.” In Michael Rossmann's group at Purdue University, my love for viruses was ignited. My independent career in structural virology began at Warwick University, England, working on pathogenic single-stranded DNA packaging viruses. In 2020, I am a full professor at the University of Florida. Most of my research is focused on the adeno-associated viruses, gene delivery vectors. My list of mentors has grown and includes Nick Muzyczka. Here, the mentee has become the mentor, and along the way, we attained a number of firsts in the field of structural virology and contributed to the field at the national and international stages.


Viruses ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (8) ◽  
pp. 1561
Author(s):  
Kristina Meier ◽  
Sigurdur R. Thorkelsson ◽  
Emmanuelle R. J. Quemin ◽  
Maria Rosenthal

Hantaviruses infect a wide range of hosts including insectivores and rodents and can also cause zoonotic infections in humans, which can lead to severe disease with possible fatal outcomes. Hantavirus outbreaks are usually linked to the population dynamics of the host animals and their habitats being in close proximity to humans, which is becoming increasingly important in a globalized world. Currently there is neither an approved vaccine nor a specific and effective antiviral treatment available for use in humans. Hantaviruses belong to the order Bunyavirales with a tri-segmented negative-sense RNA genome. They encode only five viral proteins and replicate and transcribe their genome in the cytoplasm of infected cells. However, many details of the viral amplification cycle are still unknown. In recent years, structural biology methods such as cryo-electron tomography, cryo-electron microscopy, and crystallography have contributed essentially to our understanding of virus entry by membrane fusion as well as genome encapsidation by the nucleoprotein. In this review, we provide an update on the hantavirus replication cycle with a special focus on structural virology aspects.


Author(s):  
Tobias P. Wörner ◽  
Tatiana M. Shamorkina ◽  
Joost Snijder ◽  
Albert J. R. Heck

Viruses ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (10) ◽  
pp. 1194
Author(s):  
Qing Xie ◽  
Craig K. Yoshioka ◽  
Michael S. Chapman

Adeno-associated virus is the leading viral vector for gene therapy. AAV-DJ is a recombinant variant developed for tropism to the liver. The AAV-DJ structure has been determined to 1.56 Å resolution through cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM). Only apoferritin is reported in preprints at 1.6 Å or higher resolution, and AAV-DJ nearly matches the highest resolutions ever attained through X-ray diffraction of virus crystals. However, cryo-EM has the advantage that most of the hydrogens are clear, improving the accuracy of atomic refinement, and removing ambiguity in hydrogen bond identification. Outside of secondary structures where hydrogen bonding was predictable a priori, the networks of hydrogen bonds coming from direct observation of hydrogens and acceptor atoms are quite different from those inferred even at 2.8 Å resolution. The implications for understanding viral assembly mean that cryo-EM will likely become the favored approach for high resolution structural virology.


Viruses ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (10) ◽  
pp. 1069
Author(s):  
Lauriane Lecoq ◽  
Marie-Laure Fogeron ◽  
Beat H. Meier ◽  
Michael Nassal ◽  
Anja Böckmann

Structural virology reveals the architecture underlying infection. While notably electron microscopy images have provided an atomic view on viruses which profoundly changed our understanding of these assemblies incapable of independent life, spectroscopic techniques like NMR enter the field with their strengths in detailed conformational analysis and investigation of dynamic behavior. Typically, the large assemblies represented by viral particles fall in the regime of biological high-resolution solid-state NMR, able to follow with high sensitivity the path of the viral proteins through their interactions and maturation steps during the viral life cycle. We here trace the way from first solid-state NMR investigations to the state-of-the-art approaches currently developing, including applications focused on HIV, HBV, HCV and influenza, and an outlook to the possibilities opening in the coming years.


2014 ◽  
Vol 70 (a1) ◽  
pp. C490-C490
Author(s):  
John Johnson

VIPERdb (Carrillo-Tripp, M., Shepherd, C. M., Borelli, I. A., Venkataraman, S., Lander, G., Natarajan, P., Johnson, J. E., Brooks, C. L., 3rd, and Reddy, V. S. 2009. VIPERdb2: an enhanced and web API enabled relational database for structural virology. Nucleic Acids Res 37:D436-42) is a database for icosahedral virus capsid structures. The emphasis of the resource is on providing data from structural and computational analyses on these systems, as well as high quality renderings for visual exploration. The web site includes powerful search utilities and useful database interface tools. Here we use VIPERdb to address the dynamic character of a virus by relating cryoEM based models of maturation intermediates and associated variance analysis to the high resolution coordinates in VIPERdb for the T=4 Nudaurelia Capensis ω Virus. The outcome is a structure-based description of the maturation energy landscape at near atomic resolution (Tang, J., Kearney, B., Wang, Q., Doerschuk, P. C., Baker, T. S., and Johnson, J. E. 2013. Geometric and Dynamic Analyses of Nudaurelia capensis ω Virus Maturation Reveal the Energy Landscape of Particle Transitions. J. Mol. Recog. Accepted for publication).


2011 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 81-83 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mavis Agbandje-McKenna ◽  
Richard Kuhn

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