Recognition of extremophilic archaeal viruses by eukaryotic cells: a promising nanoplatform from the third domain of life

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Recognition of extremophilic archaeal viruses by eukaryotic cells : a promising nanoplatform from the third domain of life. / Uldahl, Kristine Buch; Wu, Linping; Hall, Arnaldur; Papathanasiou, Pavlos; Peng, Xu; Moghimi, Seyed Moien.

I: Scientific Reports, Bind 6, 37966, 2016.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Uldahl, KB, Wu, L, Hall, A, Papathanasiou, P, Peng, X & Moghimi, SM 2016, 'Recognition of extremophilic archaeal viruses by eukaryotic cells: a promising nanoplatform from the third domain of life', Scientific Reports, bind 6, 37966. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep37966

APA

Uldahl, K. B., Wu, L., Hall, A., Papathanasiou, P., Peng, X., & Moghimi, S. M. (2016). Recognition of extremophilic archaeal viruses by eukaryotic cells: a promising nanoplatform from the third domain of life. Scientific Reports, 6, [37966]. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep37966

Vancouver

Uldahl KB, Wu L, Hall A, Papathanasiou P, Peng X, Moghimi SM. Recognition of extremophilic archaeal viruses by eukaryotic cells: a promising nanoplatform from the third domain of life. Scientific Reports. 2016;6. 37966. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep37966

Author

Uldahl, Kristine Buch ; Wu, Linping ; Hall, Arnaldur ; Papathanasiou, Pavlos ; Peng, Xu ; Moghimi, Seyed Moien. / Recognition of extremophilic archaeal viruses by eukaryotic cells : a promising nanoplatform from the third domain of life. I: Scientific Reports. 2016 ; Bind 6.

Bibtex

@article{4794f00a023744f3ac6484f723401514,
title = "Recognition of extremophilic archaeal viruses by eukaryotic cells: a promising nanoplatform from the third domain of life",
abstract = "Viruses from the third domain of life, Archaea, exhibit unusual features including extreme stability that allow their survival in harsh environments. In addition, these species have never been reported to integrate into human or any other eukaryotic genomes, and could thus serve for exploration of novel medical nanoplatforms. Here, we selected two archaeal viruses Sulfolobus monocaudavirus 1 (SMV1) and Sulfolobus spindle shaped virus 2 (SSV2) owing to their unique spindle shape, hyperthermostable and acid-resistant nature and studied their interaction with mammalian cells. Accordingly, we followed viral uptake, intracellular trafficking and cell viability in human endothelial cells of brain (hCMEC/D3 cells) and umbilical vein (HUVEC) origin. Whereas SMV1 is efficiently internalized into both types of human cells, SSV2 differentiates between HUVECs and hCMEC/D3 cells, thus opening a path for selective cell targeting. On internalization, both viruses localize to the lysosomal compartments. Neither SMV1, nor SSV2 induced any detrimental effect on cell morphology, plasma membrane and mitochondrial functionality. This is the first study demonstrating recognition of archaeal viruses by eukaryotic cells which provides good basis for future exploration of archaeal viruses in bioengineering and development of multifunctional vectors.",
author = "Uldahl, {Kristine Buch} and Linping Wu and Arnaldur Hall and Pavlos Papathanasiou and Xu Peng and Moghimi, {Seyed Moien}",
year = "2016",
doi = "10.1038/srep37966",
language = "English",
volume = "6",
journal = "Scientific Reports",
issn = "2045-2322",
publisher = "nature publishing group",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Recognition of extremophilic archaeal viruses by eukaryotic cells

T2 - a promising nanoplatform from the third domain of life

AU - Uldahl, Kristine Buch

AU - Wu, Linping

AU - Hall, Arnaldur

AU - Papathanasiou, Pavlos

AU - Peng, Xu

AU - Moghimi, Seyed Moien

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - Viruses from the third domain of life, Archaea, exhibit unusual features including extreme stability that allow their survival in harsh environments. In addition, these species have never been reported to integrate into human or any other eukaryotic genomes, and could thus serve for exploration of novel medical nanoplatforms. Here, we selected two archaeal viruses Sulfolobus monocaudavirus 1 (SMV1) and Sulfolobus spindle shaped virus 2 (SSV2) owing to their unique spindle shape, hyperthermostable and acid-resistant nature and studied their interaction with mammalian cells. Accordingly, we followed viral uptake, intracellular trafficking and cell viability in human endothelial cells of brain (hCMEC/D3 cells) and umbilical vein (HUVEC) origin. Whereas SMV1 is efficiently internalized into both types of human cells, SSV2 differentiates between HUVECs and hCMEC/D3 cells, thus opening a path for selective cell targeting. On internalization, both viruses localize to the lysosomal compartments. Neither SMV1, nor SSV2 induced any detrimental effect on cell morphology, plasma membrane and mitochondrial functionality. This is the first study demonstrating recognition of archaeal viruses by eukaryotic cells which provides good basis for future exploration of archaeal viruses in bioengineering and development of multifunctional vectors.

AB - Viruses from the third domain of life, Archaea, exhibit unusual features including extreme stability that allow their survival in harsh environments. In addition, these species have never been reported to integrate into human or any other eukaryotic genomes, and could thus serve for exploration of novel medical nanoplatforms. Here, we selected two archaeal viruses Sulfolobus monocaudavirus 1 (SMV1) and Sulfolobus spindle shaped virus 2 (SSV2) owing to their unique spindle shape, hyperthermostable and acid-resistant nature and studied their interaction with mammalian cells. Accordingly, we followed viral uptake, intracellular trafficking and cell viability in human endothelial cells of brain (hCMEC/D3 cells) and umbilical vein (HUVEC) origin. Whereas SMV1 is efficiently internalized into both types of human cells, SSV2 differentiates between HUVECs and hCMEC/D3 cells, thus opening a path for selective cell targeting. On internalization, both viruses localize to the lysosomal compartments. Neither SMV1, nor SSV2 induced any detrimental effect on cell morphology, plasma membrane and mitochondrial functionality. This is the first study demonstrating recognition of archaeal viruses by eukaryotic cells which provides good basis for future exploration of archaeal viruses in bioengineering and development of multifunctional vectors.

U2 - 10.1038/srep37966

DO - 10.1038/srep37966

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 27892499

VL - 6

JO - Scientific Reports

JF - Scientific Reports

SN - 2045-2322

M1 - 37966

ER -

ID: 169379720