James M. Hogle

James M. Hogle, Ph.D.

Edward S. Harkness Professor of Biological Chemistry and Molecular Pharmacology, Emeritus

Our laboratory uses structural approaches to explore how viruses enter cells and replicate.

Research:

Our laboratory uses structural approaches to explore how viruses enter cells and replicate. Current research in the laboratory is focused in two areas: 1) a multiscaled approach to characterizing the cell entry pathway of poliovirus and other simple nonenveloped viruses, 2) structural studies of key proteins in the replication of herpes viruses (in collaboration with Don Coen).

Membrane fusion provides a conceptually simple mechanism for enveloped viruses to deliver their genomes into the cytoplasm of target cells. In contrast, viruses which lack an outer membrane must provide a mechanism that allows a large nucleocapsid, or at the very least the viral genome, to cross a membrane in order to gain access to the interior of the cell. This process remains poorly understood. We are taking a combined structural approach to characterize the cell entry pathway of poliovirus as a simple model for studying nonenveloped virus entry. The combined approach uses cryoelectron microscopy to characterize soluble forms of cell entry intermediates at high resolution, and cryoelectron microscopy and cryoelectron tomography to characterize membrane-associated intermediates at intermediate resolutions, using a receptor-decorated liposome model developed in the lab.  Our cryoEM studies have benefitted greatly from the rapid advances in instrumentation and image processing in the field, and have reached a point were near-atomic resolution of well-behaved samples is becoming routine.   The structures to date have resulted in a number of surprises including the demonstration that viral peptides that are externalized and insert into membranes during infection and the viral genome are released from a site midway between a particle twofold axis and a particle fivefold axis not at the fivefold axis as previous models had proposed, and a clear demonstration that the viral RNA is released across intact membranes through a rather long tube and a pore created by the externalized viral peptides.  We are using the receptor-decorated liposome model to characterize the kinetics of RNA translocation into tethered liposomes on at the single particle level, and a combination of cross-linking and limited proteolysis to characterize the components of the tube and the pore.

Address: 

Room C-122

250 Longwood Avenue

Boston, MA 02115

Publications View
A 3D framework for understanding enterovirus 71.
Authors: Authors: Hogle JM.
Nat Struct Mol Biol
View full abstract on Pubmed
An externalized polypeptide partitions between two distinct sites on genome-released poliovirus particles.
Authors: Authors: Lin J, Cheng N, Chow M, Filman DJ, Steven AC, Hogle JM, Belnap DM.
J Virol
View full abstract on Pubmed
Poliovirus RNA is released from the capsid near a twofold symmetry axis.
Authors: Authors: Bostina M, Levy H, Filman DJ, Hogle JM.
J Virol
View full abstract on Pubmed
Catching a virus in the act of RNA release: a novel poliovirus uncoating intermediate characterized by cryo-electron microscopy.
Authors: Authors: Levy HC, Bostina M, Filman DJ, Hogle JM.
J Virol
View full abstract on Pubmed
Picornaviruses.
Authors: Authors: Tuthill TJ, Groppelli E, Hogle JM, Rowlands DJ.
Curr Top Microbiol Immunol
View full abstract on Pubmed
The crystal structure of PF-8, the DNA polymerase accessory subunit from Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus.
Authors: Authors: Baltz JL, Filman DJ, Ciustea M, Silverman JE, Lautenschlager CL, Coen DM, Ricciardi RP, Hogle JM.
J Virol
View full abstract on Pubmed
Rapid actin-dependent viral motility in live cells.
Authors: Authors: Vaughan JC, Brandenburg B, Hogle JM, Zhuang X.
Biophys J
View full abstract on Pubmed
Multiplexed plasmonic sensing based on small-dimension nanohole arrays and intensity interrogation.
Authors: Authors: Yang JC, Ji J, Hogle JM, Larson DN.
Biosens Bioelectron
View full abstract on Pubmed
Biochemical, biophysical, and mutational analyses of subunit interactions of the human cytomegalovirus nuclear egress complex.
Authors: Authors: Sam MD, Evans BT, Coen DM, Hogle JM.
J Virol
View full abstract on Pubmed
Metallic nanohole arrays on fluoropolymer substrates as small label-free real-time bioprobes.
Authors: Authors: Yang JC, Ji J, Hogle JM, Larson DN.
Nano Lett
View full abstract on Pubmed