PowerPoint PresentationCells and the Viruses That Infect Them“Phage and the Origins of Molecular Biology”Views of the Lambda Phage GenomePhage T4 GenomeLife Cycle of a BacteriophageWho Are the Real Predators Out There?Phage as Model Systems for Physical BiologySlide 9Slide 10Reconstitution of CCMVStructure of VirusesThe HIV Life CycleViews of the HIV GenomeMaking a Virus: Mature VirionsStructural Heterogeneity of HIV ParticlesThe HIV Protein Parts ListMaking a VirusImportant Yogi Berra remarksAcquiring a Membrane: How HIV Gets Its LipidsLipid Composition of the HIV MembraneWhat Are Lipids Like?Lipid Content of HIV ParticlesCapsid StructureDistribution of Spike ComplexesDistribution of Spike Proteins?Slide 27The Parts List of a VirusLecture 3: Sizing Up VirusesLecture 3: Sizing Up Viruseshttp://faculty.washington.edu/jais/microscopy.htmlCells and the Viruses That Infect ThemCells and the Viruses That Infect Themhttp://faculty.washington.edu/jais/microscopy.html+HIV+phageBacteriaT cellsNote: the viral parts list is very small (10-100 pieces) with genomes roughly of 10kb. They accomplish so much with so little.““Phage and the Origins of Molecular Phage and the Origins of Molecular Biology”Biology”Adapted from Molecular Expressions(Wertz)Analogy: Put 500m of Golden Gate Bridgesuspension cable in the back of a FedExTruck.An infected bacterium: note thatvirus injects DNA and leaves bodybehind.Views of the Lambda Phage GenomeViews of the Lambda Phage GenomePhage T4 GenomePhage T4 GenomeDespite their supposedly simplicity and the existence of sequenced genomes, there is still much that we don’t know about what goes on in these genomes.168,903 base pairs in the genomeLife Cycle of a BacteriophageLife Cycle of a BacteriophageRate of packing: 100bp/sec“Some assembly required”Self-assemblyRate of ejection: ≈ 100 - 10000bp/secConstruct a physical model of these processes.Forceful ejectionWho Are the Real Predators Out There?Who Are the Real Predators Out There?The density of bacteriophage in the ocean is 50 x 10^6/ml while the density of sharks is much less than 10^-6/ml!Hendrix et al.It is estimated that 40% of the bacterial background is infected everyday by bacteriophage - that is a predator!Phage as Model Systems for Physical Phage as Model Systems for Physical BiologyBiologyPhage provide a setting within which we can ask sharp, quantitative questions and test precise models of biological phenomena. Some universal biological themes: macromolecular assembly in a crowded environment, orchestration in space and time, polymer translocation, gene expression, evolution, nature’s nanotechnology etc.Close to having a full census (molecular inventory) and full structure of phage.An opinion: phage have not outlived their ability to teach!Rossmann et al.Plant Viruses and the “Reconstitution of LifePlant Viruses and the “Reconstitution of Life1955 Fraenkel-Conrat and Williams - first example of complex biological entity reconstituted outside off cell.> 2000 protein units co-assemble with RNA molecule.Headlines: “Life created in test tube!”Plant Viruses and the “Reconstitution of LifePlant Viruses and the “Reconstitution of LifeCowpea chlorotic mottle virus - plant virus.4 separate RNA molecules constitute its genome.Structure known with atomic resolution.Reconstitution of CCMVReconstitution of CCMVQuickTime™ and aTIFF (LZW) decompressorare needed to see this picture.Structure of VirusesStructure of Viruses(Baker et al.)Characteristic size scale is 30-100 nm.Structures are known at “atomic resolution” - see Viper website.Highly symmetric - think hard about what this implies about assembly!The HIV Life CycleThe HIV Life CycleKey point: viruses hijack the host cell to make new viruses.Once again, many of the great themes of biology are played out in this microcosm.HIV a convenient and intriguing prism through which to view all of biology.There are many interesting physical processes that take place in this life cycle that will catch our fancy: binding, membrane fusion, transcription and its control, integration, assembly, budding!This one picture literally provides a road map for the entire course. Almost all of our big themes are revealed right here!Views of the HIV GenomeViews of the HIV Genomehttp://www.gladstone.ucsf.edu/gladstone/html/connections/fig1.htmlMaking a Virus: Mature VirionsMaking a Virus: Mature VirionsFuller et al.Cryo electron microscopy provides a window on virion structure.Structural Heterogeneity of HIV Structural Heterogeneity of HIV ParticlesParticlesEach picture is 160nm wide.Benjamin et al.Mean diameter approximately 120nm.Average volume approximately 45,000 nm^3Approximate mass per virus particle is 1fg (650 Mda)The HIV Protein Parts ListThe HIV Protein Parts ListThis is a nice and thought provoking picture, but…Be careful, which features of this cartoon do we REALLY know?When shown cartoons like this, you have to ask yourself what is known and how. Compare the cartoon to the actual data - what is the data? Try to make a cartoon sometime and it will reveal lots about what we don’t know.(Turner and Summers)Making a VirusMaking a VirusFuller et al.Yogi Berra said “You can observe a lot just by watching.” We will pursue a corrolary: you can learn a lot just by estimating.Estimation question: how many Gag proteins does it take (roughly) to make an HIV virion? We begin by considering the immature virus.Does the cartoon make sense?To figure out the number of Gag proteins, we need an estimate of the area per protein.€ NGag≈AvirusAlipid≈4πrvirus2πrprotein2Important Yogi Berra remarksImportant Yogi Berra remarks "Nobody goes there anymore; it's too crowded.” "If you come to a fork in the road, take it.” "You should always go to other people's funerals; otherwise, they won't come to yours.” "It was impossible to get a conversation going; everybody was talking too much.” "You've got to be very careful if you don't know where you're going, because you might not get there."Acquiring a Membrane: How HIV Gets Acquiring a Membrane: How HIV Gets Its LipidsIts LipidsThis scanning electron microscope picture demonstratesHIV budding (arrows) from the surface of an infectedT-lymphocyte magnified 80,000X.http://www.homepage.montana.edu/~spincus/sp_hiv.htmlhttp://faculty.washington.edu/jais/microscopy.htmlLipid Composition of the HIV MembraneLipid Composition of the HIV Membrane Brugger et al.Fact of life: lipids come in many
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