http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/the-epstein-barr-virus-wears-chain-mail/
The Epstein–Barr Virus Wears Chain Mail

The Epstein–Barr virus and its relatives in the herpesvirus family are
known for their longevity. They persist in host tissues for years, causing
diseases like mononucleosis, Kaposi's sarcoma and herpes, and are
notoriously difficult to kill. University of California, Los Angeles,
biophysicist Z. Hong Zhou thinks the secret to herpesviruses' resilience
may be a layer of microscopic chain mail.

Zhou and his colleagues examined the outer shells, or capsids, of a primate
herpesvirus under an electron microscope and saw a pattern of interlocking
protein rings. Those rings form a mesh that can withstand intense pressures
and explain why herpesviruses can maintain decades-long infections.

The study <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25220471>, published in the
October 7 issue of *Structure, *marks the first time anyone has been able
to bring the herpesvirus structure into focus—literally. Solving the
configuration of a viral capsid requires both the ability to discern
individual molecules and the ability to see how those molecules fit
together in the viral shell.

Herpesviruses are so big that they don't fit within most electron
microscopes’ fields of view. Trying to understand their structure by
looking at atomic-resolution images is like trying to understand the
anatomy of an elephant based on extreme close-ups—easier said than done.
Once Zhou's team brought the image into focus, however, they saw a familiar
pattern. The interlocking mesh pattern is very similar to the structure
other virologists have found in bacteriophages, a family of viruses that
infect bacteria, which suggests that herpesviruses and bacteriophages may
share a common evolutionary origin. “We never would have seen that
connection based on genetic sequences alone,” says Jack Johnson, a
virologist at The Scripps Research Institute not involved with the study
who first discovered the chain mail pattern in bacteriophages. “This study
shows how important it is to actually look at the structure.”

These results may also open up new possibilities for vaccine development.
According to Zhou, understanding the geometry of chemical bonds within the
chain mail may help researchers develop antiviral particles that can break
them apart. “Most viruses do not have these rings,” Zhou says. “Instead,
their capsids are made of ‘bricks’ that disassemble once they've entered a
host cell.” These capsid bricks are like LEGO blocks ; even though they fit
together tightly, they're meant to be pulled apart. Herpesviruses, however,
are built to last.

They have to be. Their DNA is packed into the capsid so tightly that the
pressure it exerts on the capsid wall is about 50 times greater than the
pressure Earth's atmosphere exerts at sea level. Techniques that neutralize
viruses which have LEGO-style capsids often don't work on Epstein–Barr,
herpes or Kaposi's sarcoma viruses, much to the disappointment of many
vaccine developers.

Solving the structure is only a first step toward a vaccine, but a crucial
one. Although no one has developed a vaccine against bacteriophages (“There
really isn't a market for immunizing bacteria,” Johnson says), now that
human pathogens like Epstein–Barr and herpes simplex have been added to the
viral chain mail club, that's likely to change.



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