Having appropriate in vivo and in vitro systems that provide translational models for human disease is an integral aspect of research in neurobiology and the neurosciences. Traditional in vitro experimental models used in neurobiology include primary neuronal cultures from rats and mice, neuroblastoma cell lines including rat B35 and mouse Neuro-2A cells, rat PC12 cells, and short-term slice cultures. While many researchers rely on these models, they lack a human component and observed experimental effects could be exclusive to the respective species and may not occur identically in humans. Additionally, although these cells are neurons, they may have unstable karyotypes, making their use problematic for studies of gene expression and reproducible studies of cell signaling. It is therefore important to develop more consistent models of human neurological disease.The following procedure describes an easy-to-follow, reproducible method to obtain homogenous and viable human neuronal cultures, by differentiating the chromosomally stable human neuroblastoma cell line, SH-SY5Y. This method integrates several previously described methods [1][2][3][4] and is based on sequential removal of serum from media. The timeline includes gradual serum-starvation, with introduction of extracellular matrix proteins and neurotrophic factors. This allows neurons to differentiate, while epithelial cells are selected against, resulting in a homogeneous neuronal culture. Representative results demonstrate the successful differentiation of SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells from an initial epithelial-like cell phenotype into a more expansive and branched neuronal phenotype. This protocol offers a reliable way to generate homogeneous populations of neuronal cultures that can be used for subsequent biochemical and molecular analyses, which provides researchers with a more accurate translational model of human infection and disease. Video LinkThe video component of this article can be found at
Herpes simplex virus (HSV) is a widespread pathogen that causes epithelial lesions with recurrent disease that manifests over a lifetime. The lifelong aspect of infection results from latent viral infection of neurons, a reservoir from which the virus reactivates periodically. Recent work has demonstrated the breadth of genetic variation in globally distributed HSV strains. However, the amount of variation or capacity for mutation within one strain has not been well studied. Here we developed and applied a streamlined new approach for assembly and comparison of large DNA viral genomes such as HSV-1. This viral genome assembly (VirGA) workflow incorporates a combination of de novo assembly, alignment, and annotation strategies to automate the generation of draft genomes for large viruses. We applied this approach to quantify the amount of variation between clonal derivatives of a common parental virus stock. In addition, we examined the genetic basis for syncytial plaque phenotypes displayed by a subset of these strains. In each of the syncytial strains, we found an identical DNA change, affecting one residue in the gB (UL27) fusion protein. Since these identical mutations could have appeared after extensive in vitro passaging, we applied the VirGA sequencing and comparison approach to two clinical HSV-1 strains isolated from the same patient. One of these strains was syncytial upon first culturing; its sequence revealed the same gB mutation. These data provide insight into the extent and origin of genome-wide intrastrain HSV-1 variation and present useful methods for expansion to in vivo patient infection studies.
Summary Transmission of the malaria parasite occurs in an unpredictable moment, when a mosquito takes a blood meal. Plasmodium has therefore evolved strategies to prepare for transmission, including translationally repressing and protecting mRNAs needed to establish the infection. However, mechanisms underlying these critical controls are not well understood, including whether Plasmodium changes its translationally repressive complexes and mRNA targets in different stages. Efforts to understand this have been stymied by severe technical limitations due to substantial mosquito contamination of samples. Here using P. yoelii, for the first time we provide a proteomic comparison of a protein complex across asexual blood, sexual, and sporozoite stages, along with a transcriptomic comparison of the mRNAs that are affected in these stages. We find that the Apicomplexan-specific ALBA4 RNA-binding protein acts to regulate development of the parasite’s transmission stages, and that ALBA4 associates with both stage-specific and stage-independent partners to produce opposing mRNA fates. These efforts expand our understanding and ability to interrogate both sexual and sporozoite transmission stages and the molecular preparations they evolved to perpetuate their infectious cycle.
Highlights d Pan-coronavirus phage display library maps epitopes in patients with COVID-19 d Most immune responses target SARS-CoV-2 S, N, and ORF1ab sequences d Certain epitopes include sites of mutation in SARS-CoV-2 variants of concern d Evidence for cross-reactivity between SARS-CoV-2 and endemic human CoVs
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