Catch up on stories from the past week (and beyond) at the Slashdot story archive

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Medicine Science Technology

Scientists Unveil Structure of Adenovirus 20

An anonymous reader contributes this snippet from Medical News Daily, which begins a story of some interesting medical detective work: "After more than a decade of research, Scripps Research Institute scientists have pieced together the structure of a human adenovirus—the largest complex ever determined at atomic resolution. The new findings about the virus, which causes respiratory, eye, and gastrointestinal infections, may lead to more effective gene therapy and to new anti-viral drugs."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Scientists Unveil Structure of Adenovirus

Comments Filter:
  • by wierd_w ( 1375923 ) on Saturday August 28, 2010 @01:01PM (#33403938)
    Found some tasty information for those who are inclined to produce their own 3D model of a human adenovirus. Gives some juicy details that the linked article doesn't. A quasi-atomic model of human adenovirus type 5 capsid [nih.gov]
  • by structural_biologist ( 1122693 ) on Saturday August 28, 2010 @03:24PM (#33404784)

    The Aug 27 issue of Science, in which the x-ray crystallography study from Scripps appears, actually pubished two papers that describe the structure of adenovirus. The two papers use different techniques to achieve the same ends: the study from the researchers at Scripps grew crystals of the virus and studdied the x-ray diffraction patterns to deduce the structure of the virus. The other paper, done in collaboration between researches at UCLA and Xiangtan University in China, used a technique called cryo-electron microscopy. In this technique, the researchers freeze samples of the virus and use an electron microscope to take tens of thousands of pictures of different viruses within their samples. Although the pictures only give 2D projections of the virus structure, the individual electron microscopy images show the virus from different perspectives. By computationally aligning the images, they can reconstruct the 3 dimensional structure of the virus from the many 2D images taken. While this technique avoids the inherent difficulties of producing crystals (a process that can take decades for some samples), until very recently it has been difficult to achieve high resolution structures using this method. The cryo-EM adenovirus structure is one of only a handful of atomic resolution cryo-EM structures that have been solved to date.

    While both studies are very informative and represent scientific tours de force for their respective techniques, it is interesting that the Medical Daily focuses only on the x-ray crystallography study from Scripps. Indeed, in a commentary published by Science that accompanies the articles, Prof. Stephen Harrison of Harvard Medical School (the first person to describe the full structure of a virus) writes that, "Indeed, the cryo-EM density map of Liu et al. appears to be substantially clearer and more interpretable than the x-ray density map of Reddy et al." Perhaps Medical Daily needs to do a better job of doing their homework.

    The cryo-EM study is available at the following link (subscription required): http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/329/5995/1038 [sciencemag.org]

You knew the job was dangerous when you took it, Fred. -- Superchicken

Working...