posted on 2016-02-20, 20:46authored byStanislav Kler, Roi Asor, Chenglei Li, Avi Ginsburg, Daniel Harries, Ariella Oppenheim, Adam Zlotnick, Uri Raviv
Remarkably, uniform virus-like particles self-assemble
in a process
that appears to follow a rapid kinetic mechanism. The mechanisms by
which spherical viruses assemble from hundreds of capsid proteins
around nucleic acid, however, are yet unresolved. Using time-resolved
small-angle X-ray scattering (TR-SAXS), we have been able to directly
visualize SV40 VP1 pentamers encapsidating short RNA molecules (500mers).
This assembly process yields T = 1 icosahedral particles comprised of 12 pentamers and one RNA molecule.
The reaction is nearly one-third complete within 35 ms, following
a two-state kinetic process with no detectable intermediates. Theoretical
analysis of kinetics, using a master equation, shows that the assembly
process nucleates at the RNA and continues by a cascade of elongation
reactions in which one VP1 pentamer is added at a time, with a rate
of approximately 109 M–1 s–1. The reaction is highly robust and faster than the predicted diffusion
limit. The emerging molecular mechanism, which appears to be general
to viruses that assemble around nucleic acids, implicates long-ranged
electrostatic interactions. The model proposes that the growing nucleo-protein
complex acts as an electrostatic antenna that attracts other capsid
subunits for the encapsidation process.