RNA Homopolymers Form Higher-Curvature Virus-like Particles Than Do Normal-Composition RNAs

Unlike double-stranded DNA, single-stranded RNA can be spontaneously packaged into spherical capsids by viral capsid protein (CP) because it is a more compact and flexible polymer. Many systematic investigations of this self-assembly process have been carried out using CP from cowpea chlorotic mottl...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biophysical journal 2019-10, Vol.117 (7), p.1331-1341
Hauptverfasser: Thurm, Abby R., Beren, Christian, Duran-Meza, Ana Luisa, Knobler, Charles M., Gelbart, William M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Unlike double-stranded DNA, single-stranded RNA can be spontaneously packaged into spherical capsids by viral capsid protein (CP) because it is a more compact and flexible polymer. Many systematic investigations of this self-assembly process have been carried out using CP from cowpea chlorotic mottle virus, with a wide range of sequences and lengths of single-stranded RNA. Among these studies are measurements of the relative packaging efficiencies of these RNAs into spherical capsids. In this work, we address a fundamental issue that has received very little attention, namely the question of the preferred curvature of the capsid formed around different RNA molecules. We show in particular that homopolymers of RNA—polyribouridylic acid and polyriboadenylic acid—form exclusively T = 2-sized (∼22-nm diameter) virus-like particles (VLPs) when mixed with cowpea chlorotic mottle virus CP, independent of their length, ranging from 500 to more than 4000 nucleotides. This is in contrast to “normal-composition” RNAs (i.e., molecules with comparable numbers of each of the four nucleotides and hence capable of developing a large amount of secondary structure because of intramolecular complementarity/basepairing); a curvature corresponding to T = 3-size (∼28 nm in diameter) is preferred for the VLPs formed with such RNAs. Our work is consistent with the preferred curvature of VLPs being a consequence of interaction of CP with RNA—in particular, the presence or absence of short RNA duplexes—and suggests that the equilibrium size of the capsid results from a trade-off between this optimum size and the cost of confinement.
ISSN:0006-3495
1542-0086
1542-0086
DOI:10.1016/j.bpj.2019.08.012