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      Deep-etch EM reveals that the early poxvirus envelope is a single membrane bilayer stabilized by a geodetic “honeycomb” surface coat

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      The Journal of Cell Biology
      The Rockefeller University Press

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          Abstract

          Three-dimensional “deep-etch” electron microscopy (DEEM) resolves a longstanding controversy concerning poxvirus morphogenesis. By avoiding fixative-induced membrane distortions that confounded earlier studies, DEEM shows that the primary poxvirus envelope is a single membrane bilayer coated on its external surface by a continuous honeycomb lattice. Freeze fracture of quick-frozen poxvirus-infected cells further shows that there is only one fracture plane through this primary envelope, confirming that it consists of a single lipid bilayer. DEEM also illustrates that the honeycomb coating on this envelope is completely replaced by a different paracrystalline coat as the poxvirus matures. Correlative thin section images of infected cells freeze substituted after quick-freezing, plus DEEM imaging of Tokuyasu-type cryo-thin sections of infected cells (a new application introduced here) all indicate that the honeycomb network on immature poxvirus virions is sufficiently continuous and organized, and tightly associated with the envelope throughout development, to explain how its single lipid bilayer could remain stable in the cytoplasm even before it closes into a complete sphere.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Cell Biol
          The Journal of Cell Biology
          The Rockefeller University Press
          0021-9525
          1540-8140
          25 April 2005
          : 169
          : 2
          : 269-283
          Affiliations
          Department of Cell Biology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO 63110
          Author notes

          Correspondence to J. Heuser: jheuser@ 123456cellbiology.wustl.edu

          Article
          200412169
          10.1083/jcb.200412169
          2171873
          15851517
          958157e3-13fb-4df1-b2e7-8d745a75efb8
          Copyright © 2005, The Rockefeller University Press
          History
          : 30 December 2004
          : 15 March 2005
          Categories
          Research Articles
          Article

          Cell biology
          Cell biology

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