User:Johnsy: Difference between revisions
Line 69: | Line 69: | ||
#Pierson04 pmid=15248253 | #Pierson04 pmid=15248253 | ||
#Pohlmann02 pmid=12462149 | #Pohlmann02 pmid=12462149 | ||
#Sun06 pmid=16284274 | |||
#Wu96 pmid=8906795 | #Wu96 pmid=8906795 | ||
#Urnov00 pmid=15806097 | #Urnov00 pmid=15806097 | ||
</biblio> | </biblio> |
Revision as of 20:52, 17 November 2006
John Sy
Contact Information:
MIT Spring 2007 (Tentative)
- 7.02 Biology Lab or 20.109 Biological Engineering Lab
- 7.06 Cell Biology
- 20.330 Fields, Forces, and Flows in Biological Systems
- 21W.703 Expository Writing
MIT Fall 2006
- 5.07 Biological Chemistry I
- 7.03 Genetics
- 20.310 Molecular, Cellular and Tissue Biomechanics
- 20.309 Biological Engineering II: Instrumentation and Measurement
- 20.181 Computation for Biological Engineers
- iMath Program
Imperial iGEM
- Imperial iGEM 2006 - Biological Oscillator based upon Predator-Prey interactions using quorum sensing molecules.
- iGEM Website
- Imperial Students Engineer Success at International Competition
Education
- 2004 - present: Imperial College, London - BEng in Biomedical Engineering with a year abroad at MIT, 3rd Year
- Summer 2005: Harvard Summer School, Organic Chemistry (S-20ab)
- 2002 - 2004: British School in the Netherlands (Voorschoten, Netherlands)
- 2000 - 2002: St. John's School (Houston, TX, USA)
Interests
- Sport – Swimming and Badminton
- Travel – Travel over Europe, Asia, Africa, and North America
- Arts – frequent concerts, plays, and musicals as well as enjoy visiting art galleries and reading classics
More Random Stuff About Me
- Favourite Colours: Orange & Blue
- Ethnic Origin: Chinese from the Philippines
- Place I would like to retire: somewhere in the USA
- Quote I like: "God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference"
- Religious Affiliation: None
- What I wanted to be when I grew up: pilot, businessman, lawyer, among other things
- What I want to do now: medicine
- Places I haven't been that I want to go: Australia & New Zealand
- My best place to relax: a remote island in the Philippines
- One thing I can't live without: internet...:)
20.310 Term Paper
TItle
Analysis of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type I gp120 Receptor Interactions and its Implications on Future HIV Drug Therapy. (A single paper critique)
Abstract
In Single-Molecule Analysis of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp120-Receptor Interactions in Living Cells, the authors give a quantitative description of the binding forces and dissociation constants of the gp120/CD4/CCR5 receptor complex using a molecular force probe. Experimental data is fitted to the Bell model relating the rupture force required to break a bond between two molecules to the applied loading rate. The breakthrough proposed in this paper is providing a quantitative analysis of the forces involved in viral-host cell interactions which may lead to a better understanding of the mechanisms of viral infection. Once we successfully elucidate the molecular mechanism of viral entry, we can then propose innovate drug treatments capitalizing on HIV-1 entry inhibition.
The experimental method used by Chang, et al., is similar to the use of atomic force microscopy experiments we learnt in class to determine forces. They use a cantilever with the gp120 receptors attached and use it to probe the cell surface membrane containing only the CD4 host receptors, only the CCR5 chemokine receptors, or a combination of both receptors.
Although experimentally it was shown that the force required to break the gp120/CD4/CCR5 bond was similar to that required to break the bond between gp120 and CD4, the bond between formed between all three coreceptors lasted significantly longer than the gp120-CD4 bond.
Studies have been shown that persons with a delta32 mutation coding for the CCR5 have a much lower HIV infection rate than individuals that are wild type. Thus, understanding the mechanics behind the CCR5 interaction with the gp120 receptor protein could help in elucidating why such individuals with mutations have a much lower prevalence of HIV. This could be significant in leading to therapies aimed at modulating the receptor binding, potentially affecting the lives of millions of AIDS sufferers.
Prelimiarly Bibliography
- Chang MI, Panorchan P, Dobrowsky TM, Tseng Y, and Wirtz D. Single-molecule analysis of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 gp120-receptor interactions in living cells. J Virol. 2005 Dec;79(23):14748-55. DOI:10.1128/JVI.79.23.14748-14755.2005 |
- Doms RW and Trono D. The plasma membrane as a combat zone in the HIV battlefield. Genes Dev. 2000 Nov 1;14(21):2677-88. DOI:10.1101/gad.833300 |
- Doranz BJ, Baik SS, and Doms RW. Use of a gp120 binding assay to dissect the requirements and kinetics of human immunodeficiency virus fusion events. J Virol. 1999 Dec;73(12):10346-58. DOI:10.1128/JVI.73.12.10346-10358.1999 |
- Hill CM, Deng H, Unutmaz D, Kewalramani VN, Bastiani L, Gorny MK, Zolla-Pazner S, and Littman DR. Envelope glycoproteins from human immunodeficiency virus types 1 and 2 and simian immunodeficiency virus can use human CCR5 as a coreceptor for viral entry and make direct CD4-dependent interactions with this chemokine receptor. J Virol. 1997 Sep;71(9):6296-304. DOI:10.1128/JVI.71.9.6296-6304.1997 |
- Kwong PD, Wyatt R, Robinson J, Sweet RW, Sodroski J, and Hendrickson WA. Structure of an HIV gp120 envelope glycoprotein in complex with the CD4 receptor and a neutralizing human antibody. Nature. 1998 Jun 18;393(6686):648-59. DOI:10.1038/31405 |
- Pierson TC, Doms RW, and Pöhlmann S. Prospects of HIV-1 entry inhibitors as novel therapeutics. Rev Med Virol. 2004 Jul-Aug;14(4):255-70. DOI:10.1002/rmv.435 |
- Pöhlmann S and Doms RW. Evaluation of current approaches to inhibit HIV entry. Curr Drug Targets Infect Disord. 2002 Mar;2(1):9-16. DOI:10.2174/1568005024605864 |
- Sun SX and Wirtz D. Mechanics of enveloped virus entry into host cells. Biophys J. 2006 Jan 1;90(1):L10-2. DOI:10.1529/biophysj.105.074203 |
- Wu L, Gerard NP, Wyatt R, Choe H, Parolin C, Ruffing N, Borsetti A, Cardoso AA, Desjardin E, Newman W, Gerard C, and Sodroski J. CD4-induced interaction of primary HIV-1 gp120 glycoproteins with the chemokine receptor CCR-5. Nature. 1996 Nov 14;384(6605):179-83. DOI:10.1038/384179a0 |
- Urnov FD, Miller JC, Lee YL, Beausejour CM, Rock JM, Augustus S, Jamieson AC, Porteus MH, Gregory PD, and Holmes MC. Highly efficient endogenous human gene correction using designed zinc-finger nucleases. Nature. 2005 Jun 2;435(7042):646-51. DOI:10.1038/nature03556 |