269 research outputs found
My continuing adventure with 21 CFR Part 11 - the evolution of Zymark's compliance
A renewed focus has been given to the 3-year-old regulation 21 CFR Part 11, Electronic Records and Electronic Signatures. This paper gives a chronology of the process of an equipment vendor, Zymark Corporation, validating laboratory automation equipment for compliance to the regulation 21 CFR Part 11. Zymark's Tablet Processing Workstation II™ (TPW™) and Prelude™ are the instruments chronicled. The first instrument, the TPW™, was developed before Zymark defined its strategy on how to meet its customer's need for 21 CFR Part 11 compliant equipment. The TPW™ has been available for several years, and in the summer of 1999 it received a major software upgrade to improve its security. The second instrument, the Prelude™, is a new product. It had a design requirement to meet the regulation. Zymark's Part 11 strategy was already in place and used for this development project. This chronology will include all aspects of the exercise, including familiarization with the standard, development of the protocols, review of the protocols by industry experts, review of the protocols by pharmaceutical users, execution of the tests, preparation of the exception reports, and the release of any necessary product revisions
Universal architecture of bacterial chemoreceptor arrays
Chemoreceptors are key components of the high-performance signal transduction system that controls bacterial chemotaxis. Chemoreceptors are typically localized in a cluster at the cell pole, where interactions among the receptors in the cluster are thought to contribute to the high sensitivity, wide dynamic range, and precise adaptation of the signaling system. Previous structural and genomic studies have produced conflicting models, however, for the arrangement of the chemoreceptors in the clusters. Using whole-cell electron cryo-tomography, here we show that chemoreceptors of different classes and in many different species representing several major bacterial phyla are all arranged into a highly conserved, 12-nm hexagonal array consistent with the proposed “trimer of dimers” organization. The various observed lengths of the receptors confirm current models for the methylation, flexible bundle, signaling, and linker sub-domains in vivo. Our results suggest that the basic mechanism and function of receptor clustering is universal among bacterial species and was thus conserved during evolution
Structural diversity of bacterial flagellar motors
The bacterial flagellum is one of nature’s most amazing
and well-studied nanomachines. Its cell-wall-anchored
motor uses chemical energy to rotate a microns-long
filament and propel the bacterium towards nutrients and
away from toxins. While much is known about flagellar
motors from certain model organisms, their diversity
across the bacterial kingdom is less well characterized,
allowing the occasional misrepresentation of the motor as
an invariant, ideal machine. Here, we present an electron
cryotomographical survey of flagellar motor architectures
throughout the Bacteria. While a conserved structural
core was observed in all 11 bacteria imaged, surprisingly
novel and divergent structures as well as different symmetries were observed surrounding the core. Correlating the motor structures with the presence and absence of particular motor genes in each organism suggested the locations of five proteins involved in the export apparatus
including FliI, whose position below the C-ring was confirmed by imaging a deletion strain. The combination of
conserved and specially-adapted structures seen here
sheds light on how this complex protein nanomachine
has evolved to meet the needs of different species
Uncharacterized bacterial structures revealed by electron cryotomography
Electron cryotomography (ECT) can reveal the native structure and arrangement of macromolecular complexes inside intact cells. This technique has greatly advanced our understanding of the ultrastructure of bacterial cells. We now view bacteria as structurally complex assemblies of macromolecular machines rather than as undifferentiated bags of enzymes. To date, our group has applied ECT to nearly 90 different bacterial species, collecting more than 15,000 cryotomograms. In addition to known structures, we have observed, to our knowledge, several uncharacterized features in these tomograms. Some are completely novel structures; others expand the features or species range of known structure types. Here, we present a survey of these uncharacterized bacterial structures in the hopes of accelerating their identification and study, and furthering our understanding of the structural complexity of bacterial cells
Structure of cellular ESCRT-III spirals and their relationship to HIV budding
Abstract The ESCRT machinery along with the AAA+ ATPase Vps4 drive membrane scission for trafficking into multivesicular bodies in the endocytic pathway and for the topologically related processes of viral budding and cytokinesis, but how they accomplish this remains unclear. Using deep-etch electron microscopy, we find that endogenous ESCRT-III filaments stabilized by depleting cells of Vps4 create uniform membrane-deforming conical spirals which are assemblies of specific ESCRT-III heteropolymers. To explore functional roles for ESCRT-III filaments, we examine HIV-1 Gag-mediated budding of virus-like particles and find that depleting Vps4 traps ESCRT-III filaments around nascent Gag assemblies. Interpolating between the observed structures suggests a new role for Vps4 in separating ESCRT-III from Gag or other cargo to allow centripetal growth of a neck constricting ESCRT-III spiral. DOI: 10.7554/eLife.02184.00
Electron Cryotomography of Bacterial Cells
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
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