Elizabeth R. Wright
Credentials: Henry Lardy Professor of Biochemistry, Department of Biochemistry, Morgridge Institute Affiliate
Email: erwright2@wisc.edu
Website: Lab Website
Address:
471B HF DeLuca Biochemistry Laboratories
433 Babcock Drive, Madison, WI 53706-1544
- Education
- B.S., Columbus State University; B.S., Columbus State University; Postdoctoral, California Institute of Technology
- Areas of Expertise
- Biomolecular Folding & Interactions; Cell Structure & Signaling; Immunology & Virology; Membrane Dynamics & Proteins; Structural Biology
3D structure of viruses, bacteria, and mammalian cells by cryo-electron microscopy
The work in the Wright lab uses cryo-EM to investigate the structures of many types of cells. We also develop methods for advancing this technology. The goal is to use this information to aid in the development of novel antimicrobials, therapeutics, and vaccines.
Direct visualization of endogenous tethers on HIV-1 attached to HeLa cells by cryo-ET
HeLa cells transfected with pNLenv1-delta-U were imaged by cryo-ET. Tomographic slice (7.37 nm) of HIV-1 virions attached to plasma membrane. Immature and mature virions, maturation intermediates, and HIV budding from the plasma membrane were observed. Elements shown include HIV-1 virions (purple), immature Gag polyprotein (pink), mature cores (blue), tethers (green), and the plasma membrane (orange). Image courtesy of Joshua D. Strauss and Elizabeth R. Wright.