Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, and California NanoSystems Institute, UCLA, Los Angeles, California 90095, USA.
Phys Rev Lett. 2012 Oct 19;109(16):168104. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.109.168104.
The capsids of icosahedral viruses are closed shells assembled from a hexagonal lattice of proteins with fivefold angular defects located at the icosahedral vertices. Elasticity theory predicts that these disclinations are subject to an internal compressive prestress, which provides an explanation for the link between size and shape of capsids. Using a combination of experiment and elasticity theory we investigate the question of whether macromolecular assemblies are subject to residual prestress, due to basic geometric incompatibility of the subunits. Here we report the first direct experimental test of the theory: by controlled removal of protein pentamers from the icosahedral vertices, we measure the mechanical response of so-called "whiffle ball" capsids of herpes simplex virus, and demonstrate the signature of internal prestress locked into wild-type capsids during assembly.
二十面体病毒的衣壳是由蛋白质的六方晶格组装而成的封闭壳,五重角缺陷位于二十面体顶点处。弹性理论预测,这些位错受到内部压缩预应力的作用,这为衣壳的大小和形状之间的联系提供了一种解释。我们结合实验和弹性理论来研究这样一个问题,即由于亚基的基本几何不兼容性,大分子组装是否会受到残余预应力的影响。在这里,我们报告了该理论的第一个直接实验测试:通过从二十面体顶点上有控制地去除蛋白质五聚体,我们测量了单纯疱疹病毒所谓的“挥杆球”衣壳的力学响应,并证明了在组装过程中锁定在野生型衣壳中的内部预应力的特征。