Measurements of the self-assembly kinetics of individual viral capsids around their RNA genome
Rees F. Garmann, Aaron M. Goldfain, Vinothan N. Manoharan

TL;DR
This study uses interferometric scattering microscopy to observe the real-time self-assembly of individual viral capsids around RNA, revealing a nucleation-and-growth pathway and factors leading to malformed structures.
Contribution
It provides the first direct, quantitative measurements of the kinetics and pathways of viral capsid assembly around RNA at the single-particle level.
Findings
Assembly follows a nucleation-and-growth pathway.
Malformed structures occur when multiple nuclei form prematurely.
Assembly kinetics include nucleation threshold, time, and critical nucleus size.
Abstract
The formation of a viral capsid -- the highly-ordered protein shell that surrounds the genome of a virus -- is the canonical example of self-assembly. The capsids of many positive-sense RNA viruses spontaneously assemble from in vitro mixtures of the coat protein and RNA. The high yield of proper capsids that assemble is remarkable, given their structural complexity: 180 identical proteins must arrange into three distinct local configurations to form an icosahedral capsid with a triangulation number of 3 (T = 3). Despite a wealth of data from structural studies and simulations, even the most fundamental questions about how these structures assemble remain unresolved. Experiments have not determined whether the assembly pathway involves aggregation or nucleation, or how the RNA controls the process. Here we use interferometric scattering microscopy to directly observe the in vitro…
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