Despite recent improvements in the engineering of viral envelope proteins, it remains a significant challenge to create lentiviral vectors that allow targeted transduction to specific cell populations of interest. In this study, we developed a simple 'plug and play' strategy to retarget lentiviral vectors to any desired cell types through in vitro covalent modification of the virions with specific cell-targeting proteins (CTPs). This strategy exploits a disulfide bond-forming protein-peptide pair PDZ1 and its pentapeptide ligand (ThrGluPheCysAla, TEFCA).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report a simple strategy for the creation of lentiviral vectors specific to any desired target cells. SpyTag is inserted into an engineered Sindbis virus envelope protein and displayed on the lentivirus surface to create Sindbis virus-SpyTag pseudoparticles (Sind-SpyTag-pp). The SpyTag serves as the covalent anchoring site for a target-cell-specific cell-binding protein (CBP) that is fused to a truncated SpyCatcher (SpyCatcherΔ).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBacteria infecting eukaryotic hosts often encounter therapeutic antimicrobial and DNA damaging agents and respond by forming biofilms. While mechanisms of biofilm response are incompletely understood, they seem to involve bacterial second messenger bis-(3'-5')-cyclic dimeric guanosine monophosphate (c-di-GMP) signaling. We hypothesized that DNA replication inhibition induces bacterial biofilm formation via c-di-GMP signaling.
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