Sequences derived from the respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) fusion (F) protein were expressed in insect cells as recombinant glutathione-S-transferase (GST)-tagged proteins. The sequence covering the F2 subunit (GST-F2), and a truncated form of the F protein in which the transmembr ...
The full-length and truncated forms of recombinant envelope (E) glycoprotein from Dengue virus type 1, Singapore strain S275/90 were expressed in the yeast, Pichia pastoris, using a secretory vector. A truncated form of the E protein in which the transmembrane domain was deleted was secreted ...
Hepatitis C virus (HC V) infection is a major cause of severe chronic liver disease including cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. HCV has been classified into six major genotypes that exhibit extensive genetic variability, particularly in the envelope glycoproteins E1 and E2. Kno ...
Although many virus proteins are glycosylated, the pattern of glycosylation that is exhibited can be highly variable, and it is largely dependent on how a specific virus protein is processed by the host cell during infection. However, irrespective of their glycosylation pattern, many vir ...
Glycosaminoglycans (GAGs), including heparan sulfate (HS), are expressed on the surface of nearly all cells, linked to transmembrane proteins. These GAGs are sulfated to varying extents, lending a negative charge, and are used by a large number of viruses to initiate infection of immortali ...
The Bac-to-Bac Baculovirus expression system was used to generate a recombinant baculovirus capable of expressing the severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS)-coronavirus (CoV) 3a protein. Using the same expression system, two structural proteins, membrane (M) and envelope (E), ...
The respiratory syncytial virus fusion (F) protein is initially expressed as a single polypeptide chain (F0). The F0 subsequently undergoes posttranslational cleavage-by-cell protease activity to produce the F1 and F2 subunits. Each of the two subunits within the mature F protein is mod ...
DC-SIGN and L-SIGN are C-type lectins that recognize carbohydrate structures present on viral glycoproteins and function as attachment factors for several enveloped viruses. DC-SIGN and L-SIGN enhance viral entry and facilitate infection of cells that express the cognate entry rec ...
Methods for generating recombinant vaccinia viruses for the expression of foreign viral glycoproteins in mammalian cell lines and the purification of expressed viral glycoproteins are described. These methods are based on many years of experience with the influenza hemaggluti ...
The respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) fusion (F) protein is synthesized as an inactive precursor (F0), which subsequently undergoes post-translational cleavage to give the disulphide bond-linked F1 and F2 subunits. The methodology detailing the use of two-dimensional electrop ...
The influence of viral envelope glycans is often overlooked, but one should bear in mind that variable glycosylation may affect the properties of viral envelope glycoproteins and potentially alter the course of an infection. Hence, there is a need for simple methods that can be use to identify ch ...
The spike (S) glycoprotein of coronaviruses is known to be essential in the binding of the virus to the host cell at the advent of the infection process. To study the maturation pathway of the S glycoprotein of the severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS)-coronavirus (CoV) within the host cell, a T7/va ...
Viruses are omnipresent and extraordinarily abundant in the microbial ecosystems of water, soil, and sediment. In nearly every reported case for aquatic and porous media environments (soils and sediments) viral abundance exceeds that of co-occurring host populations by 10–100-fo ...
Most bacterial cells carry prophage genomes either integrated into the host DNA or present as repressed plasmids. Methods are described for the induction of prophages using Mitomycin C, and for the isolation of prophage-cured bacterial cell lines.
Classical bacterial enrichment devised by Sergius Winogradsky (1856–1953) and Martinus Beijerinck (1851–1931) can be modified to enrich for bacteria-specific viruses. In this chapter simple protocols are presented for the enrichment of phages from water samples, such as sewage, a ...
The detection and isolation of viruses directly from high temperature (80C) acidic (pH
Cyanophages are a group of viruses which specifically infect cyanobacteria. The cyanobacteria are predominantly aquatic phototrophic bacteria and the two dominant genera Synechococcus and Prochlorococcus contribute significantly to primary production in the oceans. C ...
Viruses are detected via either biological properties such as plaque formation or physical properties. The physical properties include appearance during microscopy and DNA sequence derived from community sequencing. The assumption is that these procedures will succeed for mo ...
Determination of virus abundance using epifluorescence microscopy is a rapid and accurate method. The protocol requires the concentration of virus particles by collection on a filter. The nucleic acid in the virus particles is then stained with a fluorescent stain and the sample viewed wi ...
Rapid identification and enumeration of the numerically important bacteriophages has been till recently a major limitation for studies of virus ecology. The development of sensitive nucleic acid stains, in combination with flow cytometric techniques, has changed this. The flow cy ...