Department of Chemistry, Indiana University , Bloomington, Indiana 47405, United States.
ACS Nano. 2017 Apr 25;11(4):3433-3437. doi: 10.1021/acsnano.7b01761.
The assembly line is a commonly invoked example of allopoiesis, the process whereby a system produces a different system than itself. In this sense, virus production in plants is an instance of bio-enabled bottom-up allopoiesis because the plant host can be regarded as a programmable assembly line for the virus. Reprogramming this assembly line and integrating it into a larger lineup of chemical manipulations has seen a flurry of activity recently, with more sophisticated systems emerging every year. The field of virus nanomaterials now has several subdisciplines that focus on virus shells as assemblers, scaffolds for molecular circuitry, chemical reactors, magnetic and photonic beacons, and therapeutic carriers. A case in point is the work reported by Brillault et al. in this issue of ACS Nano. They show how two types of animal virus coat proteins can be simultaneously expressed and efficiently assembled in plants into a complex virus-like particle of well-defined stoichiometry and composition. Such advances, combined with the promise of scalability and sustainability afforded by plants, paint a bright picture for the future of high-performance virus-based nanomaterials.
装配线是一种常见的同形发生的例子,即一个系统产生不同于自身的系统的过程。从这个意义上说,植物中的病毒生产是一种生物增强的自下而上的同形发生,因为植物宿主可以被视为病毒的可编程装配线。最近,对这条装配线进行重新编程并将其整合到更大的化学操作阵容中,已经引起了一阵热潮,每年都会出现更复杂的系统。病毒纳米材料领域现在有几个分支学科,专注于病毒壳作为组装器、分子电路的支架、化学反应堆、磁性和光子信标以及治疗载体。Brillault 等人在本期 ACS Nano 杂志上报道的工作就是一个很好的例子。他们展示了如何同时表达两种类型的动物病毒外壳蛋白,并在植物中有效地组装成具有明确化学计量和组成的复杂病毒样颗粒。这些进展,再加上植物提供的可扩展性和可持续性的承诺,为高性能基于病毒的纳米材料的未来描绘了一幅美好的图景。