Laboratório de Vírus, Departamento de Microbiologia, Instituto de Ciências Biológicas, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Av. Antônio Carlos, 6627, Belo Horizonte, 31270-901, Brazil.
Laboratório de Vacinas, Departamento de Microbiologia e Imunologia, Instituto de Ciências Biomédicas, Universidade Federal de Alfenas, Rua Gabriel Monteiro da Silva, 700, Alfenas, 37130-001, Minas Gerais, Brazil.
Virol J. 2020 Jan 31;17(1):13. doi: 10.1186/s12985-020-1291-9.
Viruses are the most numerous entities on Earth and have also been central to many episodes in the history of humankind. As the study of viruses progresses further and further, there are several limitations in transferring this knowledge to undergraduate and high school students. This deficiency is due to the difficulty in designing hands-on lessons that allow students to better absorb content, given limited financial resources and facilities, as well as the difficulty of exploiting viral particles, due to their small dimensions. The development of tools for teaching virology is important to encourage educators to expand on the covered topics and connect them to recent findings. Discoveries, such as giant DNA viruses, have provided an opportunity to explore aspects of viral particles in ways never seen before. Coupling these novel findings with techniques already explored by classical virology, including visualization of cytopathic effects on permissive cells, may represent a new way for teaching virology. This work aimed to develop a slide microscope kit that explores giant virus particles and some aspects of animal virus interaction with cell lines, with the goal of providing an innovative approach to virology teaching.
Slides were produced by staining, with crystal violet, purified giant viruses and BSC-40 and Vero cells infected with viruses of the genera Orthopoxvirus, Flavivirus, and Alphavirus. Slides with amoebae infected with different species of giant viruses and stained with hemacolor reagents were also produced.
Staining of the giant viruses allowed better visualization of the viral particles, and this technique highlights the diversity in morphology and sizes among them. Hemacolor staining enabled visualization of viral factories in amoebae, and the staining of infected BSC-40 and Vero cell monolayers with crystal violet highlights plaque-forming units.
This kit was used in practical virology classes for the Biological Sciences course (UFMG, Brazil), and it will soon be made available at a low-cost for elementary school teachers in institutions that have microscopes. We hope this tool will foster an inspiring learning environment.
病毒是地球上数量最多的实体,也是人类历史上许多事件的核心。随着病毒研究的进一步深入,将这些知识传递给本科生和高中生存在一些局限性。这一缺陷是由于设计让学生更好地吸收内容的实践课程存在困难,考虑到有限的财务资源和设施,以及由于病毒颗粒体积小,开发利用它们的难度也很大。开发病毒学教学工具对于鼓励教育工作者扩展所涵盖的主题并将其与最新发现联系起来非常重要。巨型 DNA 病毒等发现为以从未见过的方式探索病毒颗粒的各个方面提供了机会。将这些新发现与经典病毒学已经探索过的技术相结合,包括在允许细胞上观察细胞病变效应,可能代表了病毒学教学的一种新方法。本工作旨在开发一种幻灯片显微镜试剂盒,用于探索巨型病毒颗粒以及动物病毒与细胞系相互作用的某些方面,旨在为病毒学教学提供一种创新方法。
用结晶紫对纯化的巨型病毒和感染正粘病毒科、黄病毒科和甲病毒科病毒的 BSC-40 和 Vero 细胞进行染色,制作幻灯片。还制作了用不同种巨型病毒感染的变形虫并用 hemacolor 试剂染色的幻灯片。
对巨型病毒进行染色可以更好地观察病毒颗粒,这种技术突出了它们在形态和大小上的多样性。hemacolor 染色使我们能够在变形虫中观察到病毒工厂,而结晶紫对感染的 BSC-40 和 Vero 细胞单层的染色则突出了噬菌斑形成单位。
该试剂盒已在巴西 UFMG 的生物科学课程的实践病毒学课程中使用,并且很快将以低成本提供给拥有显微镜的机构的小学教师。我们希望这个工具将营造一个鼓舞人心的学习环境。