Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 8 de 8
Filtrar
Mais filtros










Base de dados
Intervalo de ano de publicação
1.
PLoS One ; 14(4): e0215531, 2019.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30986271

RESUMO

Three-dimensional electron microscopy techniques like electron tomography provide valuable insights into cellular structures, and present significant challenges for data storage and dissemination. Here we explored a novel method to publicly release more than 11,000 such datasets, more than 30 TB in total, collected by our group. Our method, based on a peer-to-peer file sharing network built around a blockchain ledger, offers a distributed solution to data storage. In addition, we offer a user-friendly browser-based interface, https://etdb.caltech.edu, for anyone interested to explore and download our data. We discuss the relative advantages and disadvantages of this system and provide tools for other groups to mine our data and/or use the same approach to share their own imaging datasets.


Assuntos
Blockchain , Redes de Comunicação de Computadores , Bases de Dados Factuais , Tomografia com Microscopia Eletrônica , Disseminação de Informação , Software , Humanos , Armazenamento e Recuperação da Informação
2.
Nat Commun ; 10(1): 1259, 2019 03 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30890709

RESUMO

To divide, Gram-negative bacterial cells must remodel cell wall at the division site. It remains debated, however, whether this cell wall remodeling alone can drive membrane constriction, or if a constrictive force from the tubulin homolog FtsZ is required. Previously, we constructed software (REMODELER 1) to simulate cell wall remodeling during growth. Here, we expanded this software to explore cell wall division (REMODELER 2). We found that simply organizing cell wall synthesis complexes at the midcell is not sufficient to cause invagination, even with the implementation of a make-before-break mechanism, in which new hoops of cell wall are made inside the existing hoops before bonds are cleaved. Division can occur, however, when a constrictive force brings the midcell into a compressed state before new hoops of relaxed cell wall are incorporated between existing hoops. Adding a make-before-break mechanism drives division with a smaller constrictive force sufficient to bring the midcell into a relaxed, but not necessarily compressed, state.


Assuntos
Proteínas de Bactérias/metabolismo , Divisão Celular/fisiologia , Parede Celular/metabolismo , Proteínas do Citoesqueleto/metabolismo , Bactérias Gram-Negativas/fisiologia , Modelos Biológicos , Parede Celular/ultraestrutura , Simulação por Computador , Constrição , Tomografia com Microscopia Eletrônica/métodos , Microscopia Intravital/métodos , Software
3.
J Struct Biol ; 192(2): 279-86, 2015 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26087141

RESUMO

Here we describe the Caltech Tomography Database and automatic image processing pipeline, designed to process, store, display, and distribute electron tomographic data including tilt-series, sample information, data collection parameters, 3D reconstructions, correlated light microscope images, snapshots, segmentations, movies, and other associated files. Tilt-series are typically uploaded automatically during collection to a user's "Inbox" and processed automatically, but can also be entered and processed in batches via scripts or file-by-file through an internet interface. As with the video website YouTube, each tilt-series is represented on the browsing page with a link to the full record, a thumbnail image and a video icon that delivers a movie of the tomogram in a pop-out window. Annotation tools allow users to add notes and snapshots. The database is fully searchable, and sets of tilt-series can be selected and re-processed, edited, or downloaded to a personal workstation. The results of further processing and snapshots of key results can be recorded in the database, automatically linked to the appropriate tilt-series. While the database is password-protected for local browsing and searching, datasets can be made public and individual files can be shared with collaborators over the Internet. Together these tools facilitate high-throughput tomography work by both individuals and groups.


Assuntos
Bases de Dados Factuais , Processamento de Imagem Assistida por Computador/métodos , Imageamento Tridimensional/métodos , Armazenamento e Recuperação da Informação/métodos , Tomografia com Microscopia Eletrônica/métodos , Sistemas de Informação
4.
Mol Biol Cell ; 24(15): 2319-27, 2013 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23761076

RESUMO

The endosomal-sorting complex required for transport (ESCRT) is evolutionarily conserved from Archaea to eukaryotes. The complex drives membrane scission events in a range of processes, including cytokinesis in Metazoa and some Archaea. CdvA is the protein in Archaea that recruits ESCRT-III to the membrane. Using electron cryotomography (ECT), we find that CdvA polymerizes into helical filaments wrapped around liposomes. ESCRT-III proteins are responsible for the cinching of membranes and have been shown to assemble into helical tubes in vitro, but here we show that they also can form nested tubes and nested cones, which reveal surprisingly numerous and versatile contacts. To observe the ESCRT-CdvA complex in a physiological context, we used ECT to image the archaeon Sulfolobus acidocaldarius and observed a distinct protein belt at the leading edge of constriction furrows in dividing cells. The known dimensions of ESCRT-III proteins constrain their possible orientations within each of these structures and point to the involvement of spiraling filaments in membrane scission.


Assuntos
Proteínas Arqueais/metabolismo , Complexos Endossomais de Distribuição Requeridos para Transporte/metabolismo , Sulfolobus/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Proteínas Arqueais/ultraestrutura , Membrana Celular/fisiologia , Microscopia Crioeletrônica , Citocinese , Tomografia com Microscopia Eletrônica , Complexos Endossomais de Distribuição Requeridos para Transporte/ultraestrutura , Sulfolobus/metabolismo , Sulfolobus/ultraestrutura
5.
J Vis Exp ; (39)2010 May 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20461053

RESUMO

While much is already known about the basic metabolism of bacterial cells, many fundamental questions are still surprisingly unanswered, including for instance how they generate and maintain specific cell shapes, establish polarity, segregate their genomes, and divide. In order to understand these phenomena, imaging technologies are needed that bridge the resolution gap between fluorescence light microscopy and higher-resolution methods such as X-ray crystallography and NMR spectroscopy. Electron cryotomography (ECT) is an emerging technology that does just this, allowing the ultrastructure of cells to be visualized in a near-native state, in three dimensions (3D), with "macromolecular" resolution (approximately 4nm).(1, 2) In ECT, cells are imaged in a vitreous, "frozen-hydrated" state in a cryo transmission electron microscope (cryoTEM) at low temperature (< -180 degrees C). For slender cells (up to approximately 500 nm in thickness(3)), intact cells are plunge-frozen within media across EM grids in cryogens such as ethane or ethane/propane mixtures. Thicker cells and biofilms can also be imaged in a vitreous state by first "high-pressure freezing" and then, "cryo-sectioning" them. A series of two-dimensional projection images are then collected through the sample as it is incrementally tilted along one or two axes. A three-dimensional reconstruction, or "tomogram" can then be calculated from the images. While ECT requires expensive instrumentation, in recent years, it has been used in a few labs to reveal the structures of various external appendages, the structures of different cell envelopes, the positions and structures of cytoskeletal filaments, and the locations and architectures of large macromolecular assemblies such as flagellar motors, internal compartments and chemoreceptor arrays.(1, 2) In this video article we illustrate how to image cells with ECT, including the processes of sample preparation, data collection, tomogram reconstruction, and interpretation of the results through segmentation and in some cases correlation with light microscopy.


Assuntos
Bactérias/ultraestrutura , Técnicas Bacteriológicas/métodos , Microscopia Crioeletrônica/métodos
6.
Mol Microbiol ; 69(1): 30-41, 2008 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18363791

RESUMO

A new method for recording both fluorescence and cryo-EM images of small bacterial cells was developed and used to identify chemoreceptor arrays in cryotomograms of intact Caulobacter crescentus cells. We show that in wild-type cells preserved in a near-native state, the chemoreceptors are hexagonally packed with a lattice spacing of 12 nm, just a few tens of nanometers away from the flagellar motor that they control. The arrays were always found on the convex side of the cell, further demonstrating that Caulobacter cells maintain dorsal/ventral as well as anterior/posterior asymmetry. Placing the known crystal structure of a trimer of receptor dimers at each vertex of the lattice accounts well for the density and agrees with other constraints. Based on this model for the arrangement of receptors, there are between one and two thousand receptors per array.


Assuntos
Proteínas de Bactérias/química , Caulobacter crescentus/química , Caulobacter crescentus/metabolismo , Células Quimiorreceptoras/química , Análise Serial de Proteínas/métodos , Proteínas de Bactérias/genética , Proteínas de Bactérias/metabolismo , Proteínas de Bactérias/ultraestrutura , Caulobacter crescentus/genética , Caulobacter crescentus/ultraestrutura , Células Quimiorreceptoras/metabolismo , Células Quimiorreceptoras/ultraestrutura , Flagelos/química , Flagelos/genética , Flagelos/metabolismo , Flagelos/ultraestrutura , Flagelina/química , Flagelina/genética , Flagelina/metabolismo , Flagelina/ultraestrutura , Processamento de Imagem Assistida por Computador , Mutação
7.
J Mol Biol ; 372(3): 764-73, 2007 Sep 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17669419

RESUMO

Carboxysomes are organelle-like polyhedral bodies found in cyanobacteria and many chemoautotrophic bacteria that are thought to facilitate carbon fixation. Carboxysomes are bounded by a proteinaceous outer shell and filled with ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RuBisCO), the first enzyme in the CO(2) fixation pathway, but exactly how they enhance carbon fixation is unclear. Here we report the three-dimensional structure of purified carboxysomes from Synechococcus species strain WH8102 as revealed by electron cryotomography. We found that while the sizes of individual carboxysomes in this organism varied from 114 nm to 137 nm, surprisingly, all were approximately icosahedral. There were on average approximately 250 RuBisCOs per carboxysome, organized into three to four concentric layers. Some models of carboxysome function depend on specific contacts between individual RuBisCOs and the shell, but no evidence of such contacts was found: no systematic patterns of connecting densities or RuBisCO positions against the shell's presumed hexagonal lattice could be discerned, and simulations showed that packing forces alone could account for the layered organization of RuBisCOs.


Assuntos
Microscopia Crioeletrônica/métodos , Organelas/ultraestrutura , Synechococcus/citologia , Synechococcus/ultraestrutura , Tomografia/métodos , Tamanho das Organelas , Organelas/enzimologia , Ribulose-Bifosfato Carboxilase/química , Synechococcus/isolamento & purificação
8.
EMBO J ; 26(8): 2218-26, 2007 Apr 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17396149

RESUMO

The major structural elements of retroviruses are contained in a single polyprotein, Gag, which in human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) comprises the MA, CA, spacer peptide 1 (SP1), NC, SP2, and p6 polypeptides. In the immature HIV-1 virion, the domains of Gag are arranged radially with the N-terminal MA domain at the membrane and C-terminal NC-SP2-p6 region nearest to the center. Here, we report the three-dimensional structures of individual immature HIV-1 virions, as obtained by electron cryotomography. The concentric shells of the Gag polyprotein are clearly visible, and radial projections of the different Gag layers reveal patches of hexagonal order within the CA and SP1 shells. Averaging well-ordered unit cells leads to a model in which each CA hexamer is stabilized by a bundle of six SP1 helices. This model suggests why the SP1 spacer is essential for assembly of the Gag lattice and how cleavage between SP1 and CA acts as a structural switch controlling maturation.


Assuntos
Proteínas do Capsídeo/química , Produtos do Gene gag/química , HIV-1/ultraestrutura , Modelos Moleculares , Vírion/ultraestrutura , Peptídeos/química , Tomografia/métodos
SELEÇÃO DE REFERÊNCIAS
DETALHE DA PESQUISA
...