Carboxylate-Directed In Vivo Assembly of Virus-like
Nanorods and Tubes for the Display of Functional Peptides and Residues
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Abstract
Uniform
dimensions and genetic tractability make filamentous viruses
attractive templates for the display of functional groups used in
materials science, sensor applications, and vaccine development. However,
active virus replication and recombination often limit the usefulness
of these viruses for such applications. To circumvent these limitations,
genetic modifications of selected negatively charged intersubunit
carboxylate residues within the coat protein of tobacco mosaic virus
(TMV) were neutralized so as to stabilize the assembly of rod-shaped
virus-like particles (VLPs) within bacterial expression systems. Here
we show that TMV-VLP nanorods are easily purified, stable, and can
be programmed in a variety of configurations to display functional
peptides for antibody and small molecule binding