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![]() by Brooks Hays Washington (UPI) Mar 28, 2017
In order to image one of the world's largest viruses, the Samba virus, scientists at Michigan State had to design and build their own microscope. Researchers retrofitted a transmission electron microscope with a cryostage, a device used to keep biological samples frozen in liquid nitrogen. Scientists used the cryo-electron microscope to map the Samba virus and observe it as the virus invaded an amoeba. Surprisingly, larger viruses are more difficult to image than smaller viruses. Larger samples simply appear as hazy, dark blobs. The addition of a Direct Electron DE-20 detector allowed researchers to focus the cryo-electron microscope on larger targets. "If the common cold virus is scaled to the size of a ladder, then the giant Samba virus is bigger than the Washington Monument," lead researcher Kristin Parent, assistant professor of biochemistry and molecular biology at Michigan State, explained in a news release. "Cryo-EM allowed us to map this virus' structure and observe the proteins it uses to enter, or attack, cells." As revealed by the latest research, the Samba opens its capsid layers, or shell, once inside the host and releases its nucleocapsid, the genetic weaponry used to jumpstart an infection. "While scientists can't study every virus on Earth, the insights we glean from viruses like the giant Samba can help us understand the mechanisms of other viruses in its family, how they thrive and how we can attack them," Parent said. Parent and her colleagues don't own the patent for cryo-electron microscope but their feat is one of the first to demonstrate the microscope's potential. Researchers believe the technology could be used to study a variety of biological samples, including proteins or entire cells. "We've done quite a bit with our limited resources, but we're primed to do more," Parent said. "I think MSU could serve as a cryo-EM center and to increase the prevalence of this technology in the Midwest and beyond."
![]() (UPI) Mar 22, 2017 Yellow fever, a viral disease transmitted by mosquitoes, is spreading through Brazil, infecting and killing both monkeys and humans. According to the latest reports from local scientists, several thousand monkeys - most of them howler monkeys - have been killed by the virus since the outbreak began in late 2016. Significant portions of the Brazilian rainforest are without a sin ... read more Related Links Epidemics on Earth - Bird Flu, HIV/AIDS, Ebola
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