Department of Physics, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat-Gan 52900, Israel.
Phys Biol. 2010 Dec 9;7(4):045001. doi: 10.1088/1478-3975/7/4/045001.
A series of simulations aimed at elucidating the self-assembly dynamics of spherical virus capsids is described. This little-understood phenomenon is a fascinating example of the complex processes that occur in the simplest of organisms. The fact that different viruses adopt similar structural forms is an indication of a common underlying design, motivating the use of simplified, low-resolution models in exploring the assembly process. Several versions of a molecular dynamics approach are described. Polyhedral shells of different sizes are involved, the assembly pathways are either irreversible or reversible and an explicit solvent is optionally included. Model design, simulation methodology and analysis techniques are discussed. The analysis focuses on the growth pathways and the nature of the intermediate states, properties that are hard to access experimentally. Among the key observations are that efficient growth proceeds by means of a cascade of highly reversible stages, and that while there are a large variety of possible partial assemblies, only a relatively small number of strongly bonded configurations are actually encountered.
描述了一系列旨在阐明球形病毒衣壳自组装动力学的模拟。这种鲜为人知的现象是最简单生物体中发生的复杂过程的一个迷人示例。不同病毒采用相似结构形式的事实表明存在共同的基础设计,这促使人们使用简化的低分辨率模型来探索组装过程。描述了几种分子动力学方法的版本。涉及不同大小的多面体壳,组装途径要么不可逆,要么可逆,并且可以选择包含显式溶剂。讨论了模型设计、模拟方法和分析技术。分析侧重于生长途径和中间状态的性质,这些性质很难通过实验获得。主要观察结果之一是,有效的生长通过一系列高度可逆的阶段进行,而且虽然可能存在大量的可能部分组装,但实际上只遇到相对较少的强键合配置。