How a Virus Circumvents Energy Barriers to Form Symmetric Shells
Sanaz Panahandeh, Siyu Li, Laurent Marichal, Rafael Leite Rubim,, Guillaume Tresset, Roya Zandi

TL;DR
This study uncovers how viral capsids transition from disordered to ordered states under physiological conditions, revealing mechanisms that enable the formation of perfect icosahedral shells despite initial disorder.
Contribution
It demonstrates the disorder-order transition in viral capsid assembly and explains how energy barriers are overcome to form symmetric shells in physiological environments.
Findings
Disorder-order transition occurs with increased capsid protein concentration.
Closed spherical shells with viral RNA form at physiological pH.
Energy considerations explain the formation of perfect icosahedral shells.
Abstract
Previous self-assembly experiments on a model icosahedral plant virus have shown that, under physiological conditions, capsid proteins initially bind to the genome through an en masse mechanism and form nucleoprotein complexes in a disordered state, which raises the questions as to how virions are assembled into a highly ordered structure in the host cell. Using small-angle X-ray scattering, we find out that a disorder-order transition occurs under physiological conditions upon an increase in capsid protein concentrations. Our cryo-transmission electron microscopy reveals closed spherical shells containing in vitro transcribed viral RNA even at pH 7.5, in marked contrast with the previous observations. We use Monte Carlo simulations to explain this disorder-order transition and find that, as the shell grows, the structures of disordered intermediates in which the distribution of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBacteriophages and microbial interactions · Plant Virus Research Studies · Animal Virus Infections Studies
