Eckard Wimmer Eckard Wimmer
Professor Emeritus


Department of Microbiology and Immunology
Dr. rerum naturalium, University of Goettingen, Germany, 1962

E-mail:
Office:
Fax:

eckard.wimer@stonybrook.edu
(631) 632-8787
(631) 632-8891

 

 

Publications

Honorary Societies and Awards

2014 Loeffler-Frosch Medal by the Society of Virology of Germany, Austria and Switzerland

2012 Member, National Academy of Sciences

2012 Robert-Koch Medal in Gold by the Robert-Koch Stiftung, Berlin, Germany

The 2010 Beijerinck Price in Virology, by The Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences

Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (2008)

Lifetime Achievement Award, The Research Foundation of the State University of New York, April 2008

Distinguished Professor of the State University of New York at Stony Brook (2002)
Highly Cited Researcher 1980 –present (ISIHighlyCited.com)

Fellow, Deutsche Akademie der Naturforscher Leopoldina von 1652 (1998)

Fellow, American Academy for Microbiology (1994)

Alexander von Humboldt-Forschungspreis (1996)

   
   

Research

We are excited about viruses, viewing them either as chemical entities whose intriguing facility of proliferation is fascinating, or as horrifying infectious agents causing appalling diseases in their host. Accordingly, research in our laboratory can roughly be divided into two general topics: viral replication and genetics at the cellular level, and mechanisms of viral pathogenensis in a host organism.

Our research focuses on RNA viruses, particularly picornaviruses, whose prototype is poliovirus. Picornaviruses, are estimated to infect 6 billion humans per year, cause a bewildering array of disease syndromes (paralysis, meningitis, heart disease, hepatitis, common cold, etc).

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Paul, 2002

Picornaviruses contain a plus-stranded RNA genome that functions as mRNA as soon as the viral particle enters the cell. The viral proteins, which are synthesized, recruit cellular factors. Together, they provide a menu for genome replication and genome encapsidation. Topics studied in the laboratory are the control of translation independently of a capping group (mediated by the Internal Ribosomal Entry Site, IRES), RNA replication and viral genetics. We can reproduce the entire replication process in a cell-free extract.

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Paul, 2002

Molecular mechanisms by which a virus causes disease in a host organism are complex and multi level. We have focused on poliovirus, a virus known for nearly 100 years that in nature infects humans only but can also cause disease in primates and transgenic mice. Poliovirus replicates somewhere in the orogastrointestinal tract (Peyer's patches?) from which it can migrate to the central nervous system where it targets motor neurons. Destruction of motor neurons causes irreversible paralysis or death, a disease called poliomyelitis. The human receptor for poliovirus (CD155) is the key for pathogenesis as it is the gate for viral entry into cells. Therefore, the interaction of CD155 with poliovirus, its role in viral spread in the host organism, and its non-pathogenic cellular function(s) are all topics studied in the laboratory. In addition, we are investigating how genetic elements of the viral genome influence neurovirulence.

Viruses are viewed to reside at the threshold between dead and living matter. This definition is flawed, however, because humans have not come to a consensus about the definition of life. When we chemically synthesized poliovirus according to its genomic sequence in the absence of natural template (Cello et al., 2002) we have shifted the definition of viruses towards non-living matter.

Indeed, we view poliovirus as a chemical with a life cycle. As chemical it can be described with the empirical formula of its organic matter (Molla et al., 1991):

C332,652 H492,388 N98,245 O131,196 P7501 S2340

Empirical formula of poliovirus

Once inside the cell, however, poliovirus expresses the hallmarks of a living entity: multiplication, heredity and variation (John Maynard Smith, 1975), and even some form of primitive sex (recombination with siblings and closely related coxsackie viruses). Proliferation of poliovirus, the organism, is driven by an irresistible desire to maintain an optimal genome structure, thereby applying an inexhaustible arsenal for achieving this goal.
 
Rapid progress in DNA synthesis in the absence of a natural template allows modification of genome sequences to an extent not possible before. Following the whole genome synthesis of poliovirus in 2002 we made the step into Synthetic Biology by generating novel viral genomes whose coding capacity was dramatically altered. This was achieved by changing codon pair bias, an as yet little known phenomenon existing in all species analyzed. The novel genotypes developed by computer aided design present new phenotypes that allow intriguing genetics or the creation of novel vaccine candidates, a strategy tested and proven in animal experiments also for poliovirus and influenza virus. Designing novel viral genomes and studying the mechanism of codon pair depend upon a close and happy collaboration with members of the Department of Computer Science of this university (particularly with Professor Steve Skiena) and with yeast geneticists (particularly Professor Bruce Futcher) from our department.

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Our recent studies focus on a poorly understood step in the life cycle of poliovirus, the encapsidation of newly made viral RNAs. We have discovered that the specificity of encapsidation is determined by an interaction between nonstructural protein 2C and capsid proteins rather than on a RNA based signal, which is commonly used by RNA viruses. In addition, we have identified glutathione, a cellular reducing agent, as an essential factor for morphogenesis.