Molecular jenga: The percolation phase transition (collapse) in virus capsids

No Thumbnail Available
Can’t use the file because of accessibility barriers? Contact us

Date

2018-06-06

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Abstract

Virus capsids are polymeric protein shells that protect the viral cargo. About half of known virus families have icosahedral capsids that self-assemble from tens to thousands of subunits. Capsid disassembly is critical to the lifecycles of many viruses yet is poorly understood. Here, we apply a graph- and percolation theory to examine the effect of removing capsid subunits on capsid stability and fragmentation. Based on the structure of the icosahedral capsid of Hepatitis B Virus (HBV), we constructed a graph of rhombic subunits arranged with icosahedral symmetry. Though our approach neglects dependence on energetics, time, and molecular detail, it quantitatively predicts a percolation phase transition consistent with recent in vitro studies of HBV capsid dissociation. While the stability of the capsid graph followed a gradual quadratic decay, the rhombic tiling abruptly fragmented when we removed more than 25% of the subunits, near the percolation threshold observed experimentally. This threshold may also affect results of capsid assembly, which also experimentally produces a preponderance of 90mer intermediates, as the intermediate steps in these reactions are reversible and can thus resemble dissociation. Application of percolation theory to understanding capsid association and dissociation may prove a general approach to relating virus biology to the underlying biophysics of the virus particle.

Description

Keywords

Citation

Brunk, Nicholas E., et al. "Molecular jenga: The percolation phase transition (collapse) in virus capsids." Physical Biology, vol. 15, no. 5, 2018-06-06, https://doi.org/10.1088/1478-3975/aac194.

Journal

Physical Biology

DOI

Relation

Rights

Type