Crystallization, Reentrant Melting, and Resolubilization
of Virus Nanoparticles
Posted on 2017-09-28 - 00:00
Crystallization
is a fundamental and ubiquitous process that is
well understood in the case of atoms or small molecules, but its outcome
is still hard to predict in the case of nanoparticles or macromolecular
complexes. Controlling the organization of virus nanoparticles into
a variety of 3D supramolecular architectures is often done by multivalent
ions and is of great interest for biomedical applications such as
drug or gene delivery and biosensing, as well as for bionanomaterials
and catalysis. In this paper, we show that slow dialysis, over several
hours, of wild-type Simian Virus 40 (wt SV40) nanoparticle solution
against salt solutions containing MgCl2, with or without
added NaCl, results in wt SV40 nanoparticles arranged in a body cubic
center crystal structure with Im3m space group, as a thermodynamic product, in coexistence with soluble
wt SV40 nanoparticles. The nanoparticle crystals formed above a critical
MgCl2 concentrations. Reentrant melting and resolubilization
of the virus nanoparticles took place when the MgCl2 concentrations
passed a second threshold. Using synchrotron solution X-ray scattering
we determined the structures and the mass fraction of the soluble
and crystal phases as a function of MgCl2 and NaCl concentrations.
A thermodynamic model, which balances the chemical potentials of the
Mg2+ ions in each of the possible states, explains our
observations. The model reveals the mechanism of both the crystallization
and the reentrant melting and resolubilization and shows that counterion
entropy is the main driving force for both processes.
CITE THIS COLLECTION
DataCiteDataCite
No result found
Asor, Roi; Ben-nun-Shaul, Orly; Oppenheim, Ariella; Raviv, Uri (2017). Crystallization, Reentrant Melting, and Resolubilization
of Virus Nanoparticles. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.7b03131