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Dive into the research topics where Stephen D. Fuller is active.

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Featured researches published by Stephen D. Fuller.


Cell Host & Microbe | 2009

Composition and Three-Dimensional Architecture of the Dengue Virus Replication and Assembly Sites

Sonja Welsch; Sven Miller; Inés Romero-Brey; Andreas Merz; Christopher K.E. Bleck; Paul Walther; Stephen D. Fuller; Claude Antony; Jacomine Krijnse-Locker; Ralf Bartenschlager

Summary Positive-strand RNA viruses are known to rearrange cellular membranes to facilitate viral genome replication. The biogenesis and three-dimensional organization of these membranes and the link between replication and virus assembly sites is not fully clear. Using electron microscopy, we find Dengue virus (DENV)-induced vesicles, convoluted membranes, and virus particles to be endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-derived, and we detect double-stranded RNA, a presumed marker of RNA replication, inside virus-induced vesicles. Electron tomography (ET) shows DENV-induced membrane structures to be part of one ER-derived network. Furthermore, ET reveals vesicle pores that could enable release of newly synthesized viral RNA and reveals budding of DENV particles on ER membranes directly apposed to vesicle pores. Thus, DENV modifies ER membrane structure to promote replication and efficient encapsidation of the genome into progeny virus. This architecture of DENV replication and assembly sites could explain the coordination of distinct steps of the flavivirus replication cycle.


Microbiology and Molecular Biology Reviews | 2000

Adding the Third Dimension to Virus Life Cycles: Three-Dimensional Reconstruction of Icosahedral Viruses from Cryo-Electron Micrographs

Timothy S. Baker; Norman H. Olson; Stephen D. Fuller

Viruses are cellular parasites. The linkage between viral and host functions makes the study of a viral life cycle an important key to cellular functions. A deeper understanding of many aspects of viral life cycles has emerged from coordinated molecular and structural studies carried out with a wide range of viral pathogens. Structural studies of viruses by means of cryo-electron microscopy and three-dimensional image reconstruction methods have grown explosively in the last decade. Here we review the use of cryo-electron microscopy for the determination of the structures of a number of icosahedral viruses. These studies span more than 20 virus families. Representative examples illustrate the use of moderate- to low-resolution (7- to 35-A) structural analyses to illuminate functional aspects of viral life cycles including host recognition, viral attachment, entry, genome release, viral transcription, translation, proassembly, maturation, release, and transmission, as well as mechanisms of host defense. The success of cryo-electron microscopy in combination with three-dimensional image reconstruction for icosahedral viruses provides a firm foundation for future explorations of more-complex viral pathogens, including the vast number that are nonspherical or nonsymmetrical.


Nature | 2006

Centrosome polarization delivers secretory granules to the immunological synapse

Jane C. Stinchcombe; Endre Majorovits; Giovanna Bossi; Stephen D. Fuller; Gillian M. Griffiths

Cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) destroy virally infected and tumorigenic cells by releasing the contents of specialized secretory lysosomes—termed ‘lytic granules’—at the immunological synapse formed between the CTL and the target. On contact with the target cell, the microtubule organizing centre of the CTL polarizes towards the target and granules move along microtubules in a minus-end direction towards the polarized microtubule organizing centre. However, the final steps of secretion have remained unclear. Here we show that CTLs do not require actin or plus-end microtubule motors for secretion, but instead the centrosome moves to and contacts the plasma membrane at the central supramolecular activation cluster of the immunological synapse. Actin and IQGAP1 are cleared away from the synapse, and granules are delivered directly to the plasma membrane. These data show that CTLs use a previously unreported mechanism for delivering secretory granules to the immunological synapse, with granule secretion controlled by centrosome delivery to the plasma membrane.


Cell | 2001

The Fusion Glycoprotein Shell of Semliki Forest Virus: An Icosahedral Assembly Primed for Fusogenic Activation at Endosomal pH

Julien Lescar; Alain Roussel; Michelle W. Wien; Jorge Navaza; Stephen D. Fuller; Gisela Wengler; Gerd Wengler; Felix A. Rey

Semliki Forest virus (SFV) has been extensively studied as a model for analyzing entry of enveloped viruses into target cells. Here we describe the trace of the polypeptide chain of the SFV fusion glycoprotein, E1, derived from an electron density map at 3.5 A resolution and describe its interactions at the surface of the virus. E1 is unexpectedly similar to the flavivirus envelope protein, with three structural domains disposed in the same primary sequence arrangement. These results introduce a new class of membrane fusion proteins which display lateral interactions to induce the necessary curvature and direct budding of closed particles. The resulting surface protein lattice is primed to cause membrane fusion when exposed to the acidic environment of the endosome.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2004

The stoichiometry of Gag protein in HIV-1

John A. G. Briggs; Martha N. Simon; Ingolf Gross; Hans-Georg Kräusslich; Stephen D. Fuller; Volker M. Vogt; Marc C. Johnson

The major structural components of HIV-1 are encoded as a single polyprotein, Gag, which is sufficient for virus particle assembly. Initially, Gag forms an approximately spherical shell underlying the membrane of the immature particle. After proteolytic maturation of Gag, the capsid (CA) domain of Gag reforms into a conical shell enclosing the RNA genome. This mature shell contains 1,000–1,500 CA proteins assembled into a hexameric lattice with a spacing of 10 nm. By contrast, little is known about the structure of the immature virus. We used cryo-EM and scanning transmission EM to determine that an average (145 nm diameter) complete immature HIV particle contains ∼5,000 structural (Gag) proteins, more than twice the number from previous estimates. In the immature virus, Gag forms a hexameric lattice with a spacing of 8.0 nm. Thus, less than half of the CA proteins form the mature core.


The EMBO Journal | 1993

Difference imaging of adenovirus: Bridging the resolution gap between X-ray crystallography and electron microscopy

Phoebe L. Stewart; Stephen D. Fuller; Roger M. Burnett

While X‐ray crystallography provides atomic resolution structures of proteins and small viruses, electron microscopy provides complementary structural information on the organization of larger assemblies at lower resolution. A novel combination of these two techniques has bridged this resolution gap and revealed the various structural components forming the capsid of human type 2 adenovirus. An image reconstruction of the intact virus, derived from cryo‐electron micrographs, was deconvolved with an approximate contrast transfer function to mitigate microscope distortions. A model capsid was calculated from 240 copies of the crystallographic structure of the major capsid protein and filtered to the correct resolution. Subtraction of the calculated capsid from the corrected reconstruction gave a three‐dimensional difference map revealing the minor proteins that stabilize the virion. Elongated density penetrating the hexon capsid at the facet edges was ascribed to polypeptide IIIa, a component required for virion assembly. Density on the inner surface of the capsid, connecting the ring of peripentonal hexons, was assigned as polypeptide VI, a component that binds DNA. Identification of the regions of hexon that contact the penton base suggests a structural mechanism for previously proposed events during cell entry.


The EMBO Journal | 2003

Structural organization of authentic, mature HIV-1 virions and cores

John A. G. Briggs; Thomas Wilk; Reinhold Welker; Hans-Georg Kräusslich; Stephen D. Fuller

Mature, infectious HIV‐1 particles contain a characteristic cone‐shaped core that encases the viral RNA and replication proteins. The architectures of mature virions and isolated cores were studied using cryo‐electron microscopy. The average size (∼145 nm) of the virion was unchanged during maturation. Most virions contained a single core but roughly one‐third contained two or more cores. Consideration of the capsid protein concentration during core assembly indicated that core formation in vivo is template‐mediated rather than concentration‐driven. Although most cores were conical, 7% were tubular. These displayed a stacked‐disc arrangement with 7‐, 8‐, 9‐ or 10‐fold axial symmetry. Layer line filtration of these images showed that the capsid subunit arrangement is consistent with a 9.6 nm hexamer resembling that previously seen in the helical tubes assembled from purified capsid protein. A common reflection (1/3.2 nm) shared between the tubular and conical cores suggested they share a similar organization. The extraordinary flexibility observed in the assembly of the mature core appears to be well suited to accommodating variation and hence there may be no single structure for the infectious virion.


Cell | 1991

Image reconstruction reveals the complex molecular organization of adenovirus

Phoebe L. Stewart; Roger M. Burnett; Marek Cyrklaff; Stephen D. Fuller

The three-dimensional structure of adenovirus has been determined by image reconstruction from cryo-electron micrographs. Comparison with the high resolution X-ray crystal structure of hexon, the major capsid protein, enabled an unusually detailed interpretation of the density map and confirmed the validity of the reconstruction. The hexon packing in the capsid shows more extensive intermolecular interfaces between facets than previously proposed. The reconstruction provides the first three-dimensional visualization of the vertex proteins, including the penton base and its associated protruding fiber. Three minor capsid proteins that stabilize and modulate capsomer interactions are revealed. One of these components stabilizes the group-of-nine hexons in the center of each facet and the other two bridge hexons in adjacent facets. The strategic positions of these proteins highlight the importance of cementing proteins in stabilizing a complex assembly.


Cell | 1987

The T=4 envelope of sindbis virus is organized by interactions with a complementary T=3 capsid

Stephen D. Fuller

The three-dimensional structure of Sindbis virus, an enveloped animal virus, has been determined to a resolution of 35 A by using a common lines procedure to combine cryoelectron micrographs of vitrified particles. The spikes of the virus appear as columnar trimers arranged on a T=4 lattice. The lipid bilayer of the virus envelope is polyhedral and surrounds a smooth T=3 nucleocapsid. Hence, a complete Sindbis virion (molecular weight 46.4 X 10(6)) contains 240 copies of each of the spike proteins and 180 copies of the capsid protein. The arrangement of the spike proteins is complementary to that of the nucleocapsid. Two types of spike-capsid interactions are seen. Spike trimers near the fivefold axes interact tightly with triplets of capsid elements, whereas those on the threefold axes interact more loosely.


Current Biology | 1997

Cryo-electron microscopy reveals ordered domains in the immature HIV-1 particle

Stephen D. Fuller; Thomas Wilk; Brent Gowen; Hans-Georg Kräusslich; Volker M. Vogt

BACKGROUND Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) is the causative agent of AIDS and the subject of intense study. The immature HIV-1 particle is traditionally described as having a well ordered, icosahedral structure made up of uncleaved Gag protein surrounded by a lipid bilayer containing envelope proteins. Expression of the Gag protein in eukaryotic cells leads to the budding of membranous virus-like particles (VLPs). RESULTS We have used cryo-electron microscopy of VLPs from insect cells and lightly fixed, immature HIV-1 particles from human lymphocytes to determine their organization. Both types of particle were heterogeneous in size, varying in diameter from 1200-2600 A. Larger particles appeared to be broken into semi-spherical sectors, each having a radius of curvature of approximately 750 A. No evidence of icosahedral symmetry was found, but local order was evidenced by small arrays of Gag protein that formed facets within the curved sectors. A consistent 270 A radial density was seen, which included a 70 A wide low density feature corresponding to the carboxy-terminal portion of the membrane attached matrix protein and the amino-terminal portion of the capsid protein. CONCLUSIONS Immature HIV-1 particles and VLPs both have a multi-sector structure characterized, not by an icosahedral organization, but by local order in which the structures of the matrix and capsid regions of Gag change upon cleavage. We propose a model in which lateral interactions between Gag protein molecules yields arrays that are organized into sectors for budding by RNA.

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Brent Gowen

Imperial College London

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John A. G. Briggs

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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Thomas Wilk

Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics

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F. Haas

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Erika J. Mancini

Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics

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Eric Karsenti

École Normale Supérieure

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