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  Walther Mothes
Associate Professor
Microbial Pathogenesis
Ph.D. Humboldt University
Berlin 1998
walther.mothes@yale.edu
phone: (203) 737-2203


Mothes Lab Web Site


Research Interests:
Cell Biology of Retroviral Replication

Our laboratory works on the cell biological aspects of retroviral replication. Retroviruses are small particles of about 100 nm that carry a viral RNA genome surrounded by a viral capsid and a membrane envelope. Given their simple composition, retroviruses depend on cellular processes throughout their replication cycle. In addition, viral replication evolved in the presence of a strong innate and adaptive immune defense. Thus, retroviral replication is the result of a complex interdependence of viral biology, the utilization of cellular biological machineries and immune evasion.

To understand the retroviral life cycle we apply an imaging approach complemented by cell biological, genetic and biochemical techniques. Live cell imaging allows us to monitor how viral components come together during assembly, to understand how viruses are transmitted from cell to cell, to determine when and where retroviruses infect cells and finally, to analyze at which point antiviral factors interfere with these individual steps.

Selected References

Sherer N.M., Mothes W. (2008). Cytonemes and tunneling nanotubules in cell-cell communication and viral pathogenesis. Trends Cell Biol. PDF

Uchil P.D., Quinlan B.D., Chan W.T., Luna J.M., Mothes W. (2008). TRIM E3 ligases interfere with early and late stages of the retroviral life cycle. PLoS Pathog. 4(2):e16. PDF

Sherer N.M., Lehmann N.M., Jimenez-Soto L.F., Horensavitz C., Pypert M., and Mothes W. (2007). Retroviruses can establish filopodial bridges for efficient cell-to-cell transmission. Nature Cell Biol. 9(3), 310-315. PDF Movies

Lehmann M.J., Sherer N.M., Marks C.B. Pypaert M., and Mothes W. (2005). Actin- and myosin-driven lateral movement of viruses along filopodia precedes their entry into cells. J. Cell Biol. 170(2), 317-325. PDF

 


Yale University
School of Medicine
Boyer Center for
Molecular Medicine
Section of Microbial
Pathogenesis
295 Congress Ave.
New Haven, CT
06536-0812 USA
 
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Yale School of Medicine, Section of Microbial Pathogenesis.
Phone (203) 737-2404, FAX (203) 737-2630.