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HiDef 3D HIV

January 25th, 2006 Medgadget Editors News


News from Oxford University about a UK-German team’s work: Structure of most deadly virus in the world revealed

The virus, which is around 60 times smaller than a red blood cell, is far too small for normal microscopes. Electron microscopes and X-rays can ‘see’ it, but often give unsatisfactory images because the virus varies so much in size and shape: one of the unique features of HIV is this size variation, which is in contrast to the uniformity of most viruses.
Professor Stephen Fuller from Oxford’s Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics and his colleagues used a technique called cryo-electron tomography to look in detail at the morphology of the virus. The technique has been used to see the virus before, but this painstaking attempt reveals the three-dimensional structure for the first time. They took images of the individual viruses from hundreds of different angles. These images were then combined using a computer, giving an unprecedented three-dimensional view of the deadly agent, published in Structure.
An HIV particle, like any virus, is not a cell but rather is strands of genetic code wrapped in protein. Viruses invade living cells and take them over by usurping the cell’s genetic code with the virus’s genetic code (which contains the instruction ‘replicate’).
HIV is a particularly successful virus, and the size and shape variability which makes it so hard to image is assumed to play a role in its success. A puzzling question was how HIV, unlike other viruses, managed to be so varied without losing its crucial structure. The new image of the particle gave new insights into that conundrum. Instead of the central region of the virus organising its growth, as in most viruses, the virus membrane and the core interact so that the core stops growing only when it reaches the membrane’s limit. The inner surface of the viral membrane ‘directs’ growth, which keeps the important parts of the structure consistent whilst allowing size variation.
‘This novel mechanism accommodates significant flexibility in lattice growth while ensuring the closure of cores of variable size and shape’, said Professor Fuller. ‘Identifying how the virus grows will allow us to address the formation of this important pathogen and understand how it accommodates its variability. This could inform the development of more effective therapeutic approaches.’

We would object to Oxford’s characterization of HIV as the “most deadly virus in the world.” According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in US, “to date only six documented cases of human survival from clinical rabies have been reported and each included a history of either pre- or postexposure prophylaxis.” The NEJM has recently identified the rabies virus as having “the highest case fatality ratio of any infectious disease,” when it published the case report of a single patient’s survival after a bat’s bite.
A flashy but scientifically incorrect headline by Oxford! Better be more careful next time, jolly ol’ chaps.

Medgadget Editors

Medical technologies transform the world! Join us and see the progress in real time. At Medgadget, we report the latest technology news, interview leaders in the field, and file dispatches from medical events around the world since 2004.

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