1 research outputs found
Coassembly of Tobacco Mosaic Virus Coat Proteins into Nanotubes with Uniform Length and Improved Physical Stability
Using
tobacco mosaic virus coat proteins (TMVcp) from both sources
of the plant and bacterial expression systems as building blocks,
we demonstrate here a coassembly strategy of TMV nanotubes in the
presence of RNA. Specifically, plant-expressed cp (cp<sub>p</sub>)
efficiently dominates the genomic RNA encapsidation to determine the
length of assembled TMV nanotubes, whereas the incorporated <i>Escherichia coli-</i>expressed cp (cp<sub>ec</sub>) improves
the physical stability of TMV nanotubes by introducing disulfide bonds
between the interfaces of subunits. We expect this coassembly strategy
can be expanded to other virus nanomaterials to obtain desired properties
based on rationally designed protein–RNA and protein–protein
interfacial interactions