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Averaging of Viral Envelope Glycoprotein Spikes from Electron Cryotomography Reconstructions using Jsubtomo
Author(s) -
Juha T. Huiskonen,
Marie-Laure Parsy,
Sai Li,
David Bitto,
Max Renner,
Thomas A. Bowden
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of visualized experiments
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.596
H-Index - 91
ISSN - 1940-087X
DOI - 10.3791/51714
Subject(s) - electron tomography , glycoprotein , cryo electron microscopy , envelope (radar) , cryo electron tomography , tomography , viral envelope , biology , resolution (logic) , computational biology , biophysics , virus , virology , physics , electron microscope , computer science , optics , artificial intelligence , microbiology and biotechnology , telecommunications , radar , scanning transmission electron microscopy
Enveloped viruses utilize membrane glycoproteins on their surface to mediate entry into host cells. Three-dimensional structural analysis of these glycoprotein ‘spikes’ is often technically challenging but important for understanding viral pathogenesis and in drug design. Here, a protocol is presented for viral spike structure determination through computational averaging of electron cryo-tomography data. Electron cryo-tomography is a technique in electron microscopy used to derive three-dimensional tomographic volume reconstructions, or tomograms, of pleomorphic biological specimens such as membrane viruses in a near-native, frozen-hydrated state. These tomograms reveal structures of interest in three dimensions, albeit at low resolution. Computational averaging of sub-volumes, or sub-tomograms, is necessary to obtain higher resolution detail of repeating structural motifs, such as viral glycoprotein spikes. A detailed computational approach for aligning and averaging sub-tomograms using the Jsubtomo software package is outlined. This approach enables visualization of the structure of viral glycoprotein spikes to a resolution in the range of 20-40 Å and study of the study of higher order spike-to-spike interactions on the virion membrane. Typical results are presented for Bunyamwera virus, an enveloped virus from the family Bunyaviridae . This family is a structurally diverse group of pathogens posing a threat to human and animal health.

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