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Novel roles for well-known players: from tobacco mosaic virus pests to enzymatically active assemblies

The rod-shaped nanoparticles of the widespread plant pathogen tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) have been a matter of intense debates and cutting-edge research for more than a hundred years. During the late 19th century, their behavior in filtration tests applied to the agent causing the 'plant mosaic...

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Autores principales: Koch, Claudia, Eber, Fabian J, Azucena, Carlos, Förste, Alexander, Walheim, Stefan, Schimmel, Thomas, Bittner, Alexander M, Jeske, Holger, Gliemann, Hartmut, Eiben, Sabine, Geiger, Fania C, Wege, Christina
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Beilstein-Institut 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4901926/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27335751
http://dx.doi.org/10.3762/bjnano.7.54
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author Koch, Claudia
Eber, Fabian J
Azucena, Carlos
Förste, Alexander
Walheim, Stefan
Schimmel, Thomas
Bittner, Alexander M
Jeske, Holger
Gliemann, Hartmut
Eiben, Sabine
Geiger, Fania C
Wege, Christina
author_facet Koch, Claudia
Eber, Fabian J
Azucena, Carlos
Förste, Alexander
Walheim, Stefan
Schimmel, Thomas
Bittner, Alexander M
Jeske, Holger
Gliemann, Hartmut
Eiben, Sabine
Geiger, Fania C
Wege, Christina
author_sort Koch, Claudia
collection PubMed
description The rod-shaped nanoparticles of the widespread plant pathogen tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) have been a matter of intense debates and cutting-edge research for more than a hundred years. During the late 19th century, their behavior in filtration tests applied to the agent causing the 'plant mosaic disease' eventually led to the discrimination of viruses from bacteria. Thereafter, they promoted the development of biophysical cornerstone techniques such as electron microscopy and ultracentrifugation. Since the 1950s, the robust, helically arranged nucleoprotein complexes consisting of a single RNA and more than 2100 identical coat protein subunits have enabled molecular studies which have pioneered the understanding of viral replication and self-assembly, and elucidated major aspects of virus–host interplay, which can lead to agronomically relevant diseases. However, during the last decades, TMV has acquired a new reputation as a well-defined high-yield nanotemplate with multivalent protein surfaces, allowing for an ordered high-density presentation of multiple active molecules or synthetic compounds. Amino acid side chains exposed on the viral coat may be tailored genetically or biochemically to meet the demands for selective conjugation reactions, or to directly engineer novel functionality on TMV-derived nanosticks. The natural TMV size (length: 300 nm) in combination with functional ligands such as peptides, enzymes, dyes, drugs or inorganic materials is advantageous for applications ranging from biomedical imaging and therapy approaches over surface enlargement of battery electrodes to the immobilization of enzymes. TMV building blocks are also amenable to external control of in vitro assembly and re-organization into technically expedient new shapes or arrays, which bears a unique potential for the development of 'smart' functional 3D structures. Among those, materials designed for enzyme-based biodetection layouts, which are routinely applied, e.g., for monitoring blood sugar concentrations, might profit particularly from the presence of TMV rods: Their surfaces were recently shown to stabilize enzymatic activities upon repeated consecutive uses and over several weeks. This review gives the reader a ride through strikingly diverse achievements obtained with TMV-based particles, compares them to the progress with related viruses, and focuses on latest results revealing special advantages for enzyme-based biosensing formats, which might be of high interest for diagnostics employing 'systems-on-a-chip'.
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spelling pubmed-49019262016-06-22 Novel roles for well-known players: from tobacco mosaic virus pests to enzymatically active assemblies Koch, Claudia Eber, Fabian J Azucena, Carlos Förste, Alexander Walheim, Stefan Schimmel, Thomas Bittner, Alexander M Jeske, Holger Gliemann, Hartmut Eiben, Sabine Geiger, Fania C Wege, Christina Beilstein J Nanotechnol Review The rod-shaped nanoparticles of the widespread plant pathogen tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) have been a matter of intense debates and cutting-edge research for more than a hundred years. During the late 19th century, their behavior in filtration tests applied to the agent causing the 'plant mosaic disease' eventually led to the discrimination of viruses from bacteria. Thereafter, they promoted the development of biophysical cornerstone techniques such as electron microscopy and ultracentrifugation. Since the 1950s, the robust, helically arranged nucleoprotein complexes consisting of a single RNA and more than 2100 identical coat protein subunits have enabled molecular studies which have pioneered the understanding of viral replication and self-assembly, and elucidated major aspects of virus–host interplay, which can lead to agronomically relevant diseases. However, during the last decades, TMV has acquired a new reputation as a well-defined high-yield nanotemplate with multivalent protein surfaces, allowing for an ordered high-density presentation of multiple active molecules or synthetic compounds. Amino acid side chains exposed on the viral coat may be tailored genetically or biochemically to meet the demands for selective conjugation reactions, or to directly engineer novel functionality on TMV-derived nanosticks. The natural TMV size (length: 300 nm) in combination with functional ligands such as peptides, enzymes, dyes, drugs or inorganic materials is advantageous for applications ranging from biomedical imaging and therapy approaches over surface enlargement of battery electrodes to the immobilization of enzymes. TMV building blocks are also amenable to external control of in vitro assembly and re-organization into technically expedient new shapes or arrays, which bears a unique potential for the development of 'smart' functional 3D structures. Among those, materials designed for enzyme-based biodetection layouts, which are routinely applied, e.g., for monitoring blood sugar concentrations, might profit particularly from the presence of TMV rods: Their surfaces were recently shown to stabilize enzymatic activities upon repeated consecutive uses and over several weeks. This review gives the reader a ride through strikingly diverse achievements obtained with TMV-based particles, compares them to the progress with related viruses, and focuses on latest results revealing special advantages for enzyme-based biosensing formats, which might be of high interest for diagnostics employing 'systems-on-a-chip'. Beilstein-Institut 2016-04-25 /pmc/articles/PMC4901926/ /pubmed/27335751 http://dx.doi.org/10.3762/bjnano.7.54 Text en Copyright © 2016, Koch et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0https://www.beilstein-journals.org/bjnano/termsThis is an Open Access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. The license is subject to the Beilstein Journal of Nanotechnology terms and conditions: (https://www.beilstein-journals.org/bjnano/terms)
spellingShingle Review
Koch, Claudia
Eber, Fabian J
Azucena, Carlos
Förste, Alexander
Walheim, Stefan
Schimmel, Thomas
Bittner, Alexander M
Jeske, Holger
Gliemann, Hartmut
Eiben, Sabine
Geiger, Fania C
Wege, Christina
Novel roles for well-known players: from tobacco mosaic virus pests to enzymatically active assemblies
title Novel roles for well-known players: from tobacco mosaic virus pests to enzymatically active assemblies
title_full Novel roles for well-known players: from tobacco mosaic virus pests to enzymatically active assemblies
title_fullStr Novel roles for well-known players: from tobacco mosaic virus pests to enzymatically active assemblies
title_full_unstemmed Novel roles for well-known players: from tobacco mosaic virus pests to enzymatically active assemblies
title_short Novel roles for well-known players: from tobacco mosaic virus pests to enzymatically active assemblies
title_sort novel roles for well-known players: from tobacco mosaic virus pests to enzymatically active assemblies
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4901926/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27335751
http://dx.doi.org/10.3762/bjnano.7.54
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