Groves Nicholas S, Bruns Merissa M, van Engelenburg Schuyler B
Molecular and Cellular Biophysics Program, Department of Biological Sciences, University of Denver, Denver, CO 80210, USA.
Pathogens. 2020 Nov 21;9(11):972. doi: 10.3390/pathogens9110972.
The insurgence of superresolution microscopy into the fields of virology and microbiology has begun to enable the mapping of molecular assemblies critical for host-pathogen interfaces that organize on a scale below the resolution limit of the light microscope. It is, however, challenging to completely understand the molecular interactions between host and pathogen from strictly time-invariant observations. Herein, we describe a method using simultaneous dual-color superresolution microscopy to gain both structural and dynamic information about HIV-1 assembly. Specifically, we demonstrate the reconstruction of single virus assembly sites using live-cell photo-activated localization microscopy (PALM) while concurrently assessing the sub-viral mobility of the HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein during interaction with the viral lattice. We propose that our method is broadly applicable to elucidating pathogen and host protein-protein interactions through quantification of the dynamics of these proteins at the nanoscale.
超分辨率显微镜在病毒学和微生物学领域的兴起,已开始能够绘制出对宿主-病原体界面至关重要的分子组装图谱,这些分子组装在光显微镜分辨率极限以下的尺度上组织。然而,仅从严格的时间不变观察中完全理解宿主与病原体之间的分子相互作用具有挑战性。在此,我们描述了一种使用同步双色超分辨率显微镜的方法,以获取有关HIV-1组装的结构和动态信息。具体而言,我们展示了使用活细胞光激活定位显微镜(PALM)重建单个病毒组装位点,同时评估HIV-1包膜糖蛋白在与病毒晶格相互作用期间的亚病毒流动性。我们认为,我们的方法广泛适用于通过在纳米尺度上量化这些蛋白质的动力学来阐明病原体与宿主的蛋白质-蛋白质相互作用。