The introduction in 1990 of a new biosensor technology based on surface plasmon resonance has revolutionized the measurement of antigen-antibody binding interactions. In this technique, one of the interacting partners is immobilized on a sensor chip and the binding of the other is followed by the increase in refractive index caused by the mass of bound species. The following immunochemical applications of this new technology will be described: (1) functional mapping of epitopes and paratopes by mutagenesis; (2) analysis of the thermodynamic parameters of the interaction; (3) measurement of the concentration of biologically active molecules; (4) selection of diagnostic probes.
Two viral proteins, 1a and 2a, direct replication of brome mosaic bromovirus (BMV) RNAs as well as they participate in BMV RNA recombination. To study the relationship between replication and recombination, double BMV variants that carried mutations in 1a and 2a genes were tested. The observed effects revealed that the 1a helicase and 2a N-terminal or core domains were functionally linked during both processes in vivo. The use of a series of mutant BMV replicase (RdRp) preparations demonstrated in vitro the participation of the 1a and 2a domains in BMV RNA copying and in template switching during minus-strand synthesis. The observed effects support previous observations that the characteristics of homologous and nonhomologous recombination can be modified separately by mutations at different sites on BMV replicase proteins.
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