German researchers show how poxviruses multiply

The last case of smallpox worldwide occurred in Somalia in October 1977. In 1980, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared the eradication of smallpox. According to official sources, the virus continues to exist today only in two high-security laboratories in Russia and the USA, where it is used for research purposes.

But although this means that poxviruses are no longer an immediate threat to humans, this virus family is still of great interest to scientists. On the one hand, modified strains are used in the treatment of cancer, and on the other hand, they possess highly intriguing multiplication properties. Structure of the poxvirus-polymerase in an early stage of transcription. Bound DNA is labelled in blue.  CREDIT Clemens Grimm

Smallpox viruses build their multiplication machine

While many viruses draw largely on the biochemical resources of the host cell for their multiplication, poxviruses encode their molecular machinery in their genome for that purpose. The important components of this machinery are two enzymes: DNA polymerase to multiply the viral genes, and RNA polymerase to transcribe the viral genes into mRNA. The RNA polymerase of the vaccinia poxvirus strain, for example, is a large complex comprising 15 different protein subunits with different biochemical functions.

A team of researchers from the Biocenter of the Julius-Maximilian University of Würzburg (JMU) in Germany has now for the first time been able to watch the polymerase of vaccinia viruses doing their work at an atomic level. Before that, the team had already reported on the three-dimensional structure of the RNA polymerase at atomic resolution. The group in charge of the work is led by Utz Fischer, who holds the JMU’s Chair of the Department of Biochemistry I. The results of their work have now been presented in a publication in the journal Nature Structure and Molecular Biology.

Three-dimensional structures on an atomic scale

“We have mixed isolated RNA polymerase with a piece of DNA containing the promoter, i.e. the start signal for the transcription of viral genes. The enzyme recognized precisely this DNA element and started producing mRNA”, explains Julia Bartuli, in charge of the biochemical work of the study. In the next step, the samples were examined in the cryo-electron microscope, in cooperation with Bettina Böttcher from the Department of Biochemistry II. Based on the data collected, the scientists were able to reconstruct the three-dimensional structure of the sample down to the atomic scale, using modern computerized methods.

They were enthusiastic about the final result of this lengthy process: “One single sample we examined in the microscope allowed us to reconstruct a total of six different polymerase complexes, which we could finally allocate to individual phases of the transcription process,” says Clemens Grimm, in charge of structural analysis in Fischer’s department. “We can string the individual pictures together as in a movie and thus represent the early transcription phase with time resolution.” 

Smallpox continues to be a threat to humans

But why bother to research poxviruses if the virus that is so dangerous to humans is eradicated already? There are good reasons for this, replies Professor Fischer: “There is still no reliable cure for smallpox infection, it can only be prevented by vaccination. If the still existing virus samples were to be spread again, for example by a terrorist attack, they would hit a population that has no immunization.”

Another threat, which may be more real, is zoonotic diseases caused by animal-specific viruses jumping to humans, explains biochemist Utz Fischer. For example, there are sporadic infections of humans by monkeypox, which can make the infected persons severely ill. “If such a zoonotic disease picks up speed, by further adaption to its human host and human-to-human transmission, a dangerous epidemic could emerge”, he says.

Using supercomputers to develop new drugs

Inhibitors of viral gene expression would therefore be highly relevant as antiviral drugs. Understanding the atomic structures of RNA polymerase in its different states allows researchers now a rational, structure-based computer approach to the development of such inhibitors. Such studies, which are fundamentally different in method from the classic experimental procedure, are already well underway.

People born before 1976 – in Germany at any rate – bear on their upper arm a visible scar from their smallpox vaccination. Up to that date, vaccination was mandatory in Germany. This vaccination is among the most prominent successes of modern infection protection. It resulted in the eradication of the deadly smallpox pathogen. This pathogen, scientifically known as the variola virus, had been the cause of smallpox epidemics that scourged mankind periodically until well into the 20th century and took the lives of millions of people.

Early forms of inoculation of sorts have been known since antiquity, when people introduced the scab of a healed smallpox blister into a small wound, hoping to thus prevent a severe illness. This procedure called “variolation” was performed in the 18th century in Europe, among other places at the Juliusspital in Würzburg. The breakthrough in the fight against smallpox was achieved in 1976 by the British physician Edward Jenner, who substituted the harmless horsepox or cowpox pathogen for the much more dangerous smallpox virus.

The strain used by Jenner has gone down in medical history with the name vaccinia. It has lent its name to today’s common immunization practices known as vaccinations. A global vaccination campaign using the vaccinia strain ultimately led to the WHO’s declaration about the eradication of smallpox in 1980 – for the first time in the history of mankind an infectious disease had been defeated worldwide.

China develops a 15-user quantum secure direct communication network

Quantum communication has presented a revolutionary step in secure communication due to its high security of quantum information, and many communication protocols have been proposed, such as the quantum secure direct communication (QSDC) protocol. QSDC based on entanglement can directly transmit confidential information. Any attack of QSDC results in only random numbers, and cannot obtain any useful information from it. Therefore, QSDC has simple communication steps and reduces potential security loopholes, and offers high-security guarantees, which guarantees the security and the value propositions of quantum communications in general. However, the inability to simultaneously distinguish the four sets of encoded orthogonal entangled states in entanglement-based QSDC protocols limits its practical application. Furthermore, it is important to construct a quantum network in order to make wide applications of quantum secure direct communication. Experimental demonstration of QSDC is badly required. (a) The quantum network is fully connected by five subnets (A, B, C, D and E are represented by red, orange, green, blue, and black, respectively). The dotted lines between the subnets (10 links with different colors) are the correlated time-energy photon pairs between the subnets. (b) Every subnet (such as subnet A) is equipped with a 1×3 beam splitter and a delay controlling module, which splits a frequency-correlated entangled photon pair (red and blue signs) and sends them to three users randomly.  CREDIT by Zhantong Qi, Yuanhua Li, Yiwen Huang, Juan Feng , Yuanlin Zheng , and Xianfeng Chen

In a new paper published in Light Science & Application, a team of scientists, led by Professor Xianfeng Chen from State Key Laboratory of Advanced Optical Communication Systems and Networks, School of Physics and Astronomy, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, China, and Professor Yuanhua Li from Department of Physics, Jiangxi Normal University, China have explored a QSDC network based on time-energy entanglement and sum-frequency generation (SFG). They present a fully connected entanglement-based QSDC network including five subnets, with 15 users. Using the frequency correlations of the fifteen photon pairs via time-division multiplexing and dense wavelength division multiplexing (DWDM), they perform a 40-kilometer fiber QSDC experiment by implying two-step transmission between each user. In this process, the network processor divides the spectrum of the single-photon source into 30 International Telecommunication Union (ITU) channels. With these channels, there will be a coincidence event between each user by performing a Bell-state measurement based on the SFG. This allows the four sets of encoded entangled states to be identified simultaneously without post-selection.

It is well known that the security and reliability of the information transmission for QSDC is an essential part of the quantum network. Therefore, they implemented block transmission and step-by-step transmission methods in QSDC with estimating the secrecy capacity of the quantum channel. After confirming the security of the quantum channel, the legitimate user performs encoding or decoding operations within these schemes reliably.

These scientists summarize the experiment results of their network scheme:

“The results show that when any two users are performing QSDC over 40 kilometers of optical fiber, the fidelity of the entangled state shared by them is still greater than 95%, and the rate of information transmission can be maintained at 1 Kbp/s. Our result demonstrates the feasibility of a proposed QSDC network, and hence lays the foundation for the realization of satellite-based long-distance and global QSDC in the future.”

“With this scheme, each user interconnects with any others through shared pairs of entangled photons in a different wavelength. Moreover, it is possible to improve the information transmission rate greater than 100 Kbp/s in the case of the high-performance detectors, as well as high-speed control in modulator being used” they added.

“It is worth noting the present-work, which offers long-distance point-to-point QSDC connection, combined with the recently proposed secure-repeater quantum network of QSDC, which offers secure end-to-end communication throughout the quantum Internet, will enable the construction of secure quantum network using present-day technology, realizing the great potential of QSDC in future communication.” the scientists forecast.

Sheikh gets NSF Fellowship for Research & Education at the SETI Institute’s Allen Telescope Array

Dr. Sofia Sheikh has been awarded a Mathematical and Physical Sciences Ascending Postdoctoral Research Fellowship (MPS-Ascend) for research and education by the National Science Foundation (NSF). Sheikh’s research is focused on fast radio bursts (FRBs) and developing improved techno signature detection methods, specifically by searching higher radio frequencies and in new areas of the sky. She will also mentor underrepresented students in physics and astronomy, helping them build strong networks and providing valuable research experiences. Sheikh's work will leverage the unique qualities of the Allen Telescope Array (ATA), the only radio telescope constructed with SETI as its principal activity. The Allen Telescope Array in Hat Creek, California. Image Credit: Greg Hark.

"The combination of Sofia's keen scientific abilities and audacious passion for carving her path is truly remarkable," said Andrew Siemion, Bernard M. Oliver Chair for SETI at the SETI Institute. "Sofia is a world-class scientist who is demonstrating vision, tenacity, and academic excellence in researching a profound and challenging topic."

Sheikh studied physics and astronomy at the University of California, Berkeley, for her undergraduate education and completed her dual Ph.D. in Astronomy and Astrobiology at Penn State. She worked with the Breakthrough Listen project at the Berkeley SETI Research Center throughout her academic studies, developing her interest in radio astronomy and the search for technosignatures.

Sheikh plans three research activities using the ATA:

  1. Develop hardware and software to increase the backend coherent imaging capabilities of the ATA
  2. Use these new capabilities to localize and characterize FRBs previously detected with other radio telescopes
  3. Search for signs of extraterrestrial intelligent life with radio observations of the anti-solar point, defining a particular space and time on the sky from which a distant observer could see Earth in transit around the SunDr. Sofia Sheikh

"I am honored and extremely excited to be taking my NSF MPS-ASCEND Fellowship to the SETI Institute,” said Sheikh. “I look forward to carrying out the Fellowship's mission by developing the newest frontiers of techno signature research while simultaneously furthering science through the mentorship of underrepresented students in physics and astronomy." 

“When you work on a potentially multi-generation project, you really need to think seriously about training your replacements,” said Jill Tarter, co-founder of the SETI Institute. “Sofia's MPS - ASCEND award gives us the opportunity to invoke the next generation and think laterally about what/who/where we can expand opportunities for commensal observing programs.”

Sheikh’s three-year fellowship officially begins on January 1, 2022.