This article develops a multi-perspective view on motivations and methods for tobamovirus purification through the ages and presents a novel, efficient, easy-to-use approach that can be well-adapted to different species of native and functionalized virions. We survey the various driving forces prompting researchers to enrich tobamoviruses, from the search for the causative agents of mosaic diseases in plants to their increasing recognition as versatile nanocarriers in biomedical and engineering applications. The best practices and rarely applied options for the serial processing steps required for successful isolation of tobamoviruses are then reviewed. Adaptations for distinct particle species, pitfalls, and 'forgotten' or underrepresented technologies are considered as well. The article is topped off with our own development of a method for virion preparation, rooted in historical protocols. It combines selective re-solubilization of polyethylene glycol (PEG) virion raw precipitates with density step gradient centrifugation in biocompatible iodixanol formulations, yielding ready-to-use particle suspensions. This newly established protocol and some considerations for perhaps worthwhile further developments could serve as putative stepping stones towards preparation procedures appropriate for routine practical uses of these multivalent soft-matter nanorods.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/v16060884 | DOI Listing |
Viruses
May 2024
Institute of Biomaterials and Biomolecular Systems, Molecular and Synthetic Plant Virology, University of Stuttgart, Pfaffenwaldring 57, 70569 Stuttgart, Germany.
This article develops a multi-perspective view on motivations and methods for tobamovirus purification through the ages and presents a novel, efficient, easy-to-use approach that can be well-adapted to different species of native and functionalized virions. We survey the various driving forces prompting researchers to enrich tobamoviruses, from the search for the causative agents of mosaic diseases in plants to their increasing recognition as versatile nanocarriers in biomedical and engineering applications. The best practices and rarely applied options for the serial processing steps required for successful isolation of tobamoviruses are then reviewed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Plant Pathol
January 2022
College of Plant Protection, Southwest University, Chongqing, China.
Asparagine synthetase is a key enzyme that catalyses the conversion of amide groups from glutamine or ammonium to aspartate, which leads to the generation of asparagine. However, the role of asparagine synthetase in plant immunity remains largely unknown. Here, we identified a Nicotiana benthamiana asparagine synthetase B (NbAS-B) that associates with tomato mosaic virus coat protein-interacting protein L (IP-L) using the yeast two-hybrid assay and examined its role in tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) resistance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlatinum resistance in ovarian cancer is the major determinant of disease prognosis. Resistance can first appear at the onset of disease or develop in response to platinum-based chemotherapy. Due to poor response to alternate chemotherapies and lack of targeted therapies, there is an urgent clinical need for a new avenue toward treatment of platinum-resistant (PR) ovarian cancer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Phys Chem B
July 2016
Department of Biomedical Engineering, Case Western Reserve University Schools of Medicine and Engineering, Cleveland, Ohio 44106, United States.
Nanoparticle-based technologies, including platforms derived from plant viruses, hold great promise for targeting and delivering cancer therapeutics to solid tumors by overcoming dose-limiting toxicities associated with chemotherapies. A growing body of data indicates advantageous margination and penetration properties of high aspect-ratio nanoparticles, which enhance payload delivery, resulting in increased efficacy. Our lab has demonstrated that elongated rod-shaped and filamentous macromolecular nucleoprotein assemblies from plant viruses have higher tissue diffusion rates than spherical particles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicrotubules in crane-fly spermatids appeared altered when the glutaraldehyde-fixed cells were not postfixed with osmium tetroxide. The cytoplasmic microtubules were altered more than the doublet microtubules. Addition of osmium tetroxide after dehydration did not produce appearances identical with those of microtubules postfixed directly after glutaraldehyde, and thus at least some alterations occurred during dehydration, possibly due to extraction of microtubule-associated lipid.
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