Department of Infectious Diseases, Virology, University Hospital of Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany.
Traffic. 2013 Jan;14(1):15-24. doi: 10.1111/tra.12006. Epub 2012 Oct 3.
The replication of HIV-1, like that of all viruses, is intimately connected with cellular structures and pathways. For many years, bulk biochemical and cell biological methods were the main approaches employed to investigate interactions between HIV-1 and its host cell. However, during the past decade advancements in fluorescence imaging technologies opened new possibilities for the direct visualization of individual steps occurring throughout the viral replication cycle. Electron microscopy (EM) methods, which have traditionally been employed for the study of viruses, are complemented by fluorescence microscopy (FM) techniques that allow us to follow the dynamics of virus-cell interaction. Subdiffraction fluorescence microscopy, as well as correlative EM/FM approaches, are narrowing the fundamental gap between the high structural resolution provided by EM and the high temporal resolution and throughput accomplished by FM. The application of modern microscopy to the study of HIV-1-host cell interactions has provided insights into the biology of the virus which could not easily, or not at all, have been gained by other methods. Here, we review how modern fluorescence imaging techniques enhanced our knowledge of the dynamic and structural changes involved in HIV-1 particle formation.
HIV-1 的复制过程与所有病毒一样,与细胞结构和途径密切相关。多年来,批量生化和细胞生物学方法是研究 HIV-1 与其宿主细胞之间相互作用的主要方法。然而,在过去的十年中,荧光成像技术的进步为直接观察整个病毒复制周期中发生的各个步骤开辟了新的可能性。传统上用于研究病毒的电子显微镜 (EM) 方法与荧光显微镜 (FM) 技术相辅相成,后者可以让我们跟踪病毒-细胞相互作用的动态。亚衍射荧光显微镜以及相关的 EM/FM 方法正在缩小 EM 提供的高结构分辨率与 FM 实现的高时间分辨率和高通量之间的基本差距。将现代显微镜应用于 HIV-1-宿主细胞相互作用的研究为病毒生物学提供了深入的了解,而这些了解很难或根本无法通过其他方法获得。在这里,我们回顾了现代荧光成像技术如何增强我们对 HIV-1 颗粒形成所涉及的动态和结构变化的认识。