4.6 Article

Close packings of identical proteins in small spherical capsids and similar proteinaceous shells

Journal

SOFT MATTER
Volume 19, Issue 44, Pages 8649-8658

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d3sm01106b

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Understanding the principles of protein arrangement in viral capsids and similar protein shells can lead to the development of new antiviral strategies and the design of artificial protein cages. By analyzing small spherical shells made from a single type of protein, researchers have discovered correlations between protein mass centers and packing arrangements, as well as proposed models for different shapes and anisotropy of proteins. The study also reveals energy and symmetry reasons controlling capsid structures, including handedness and interprotein bonds.
Understanding the principles governing protein arrangement in viral capsids and structurally similar protein shells can enable the development of new antiviral strategies and the design of artificial protein cages for various applications. We study these principles within the context of the close packing problem, by analyzing dozens of small spherical shells assembled from a single type of protein. First, we use icosahedral spherical close packings containing 60T identical disks, where T <= 4, to rationalize the protein arrangement in twenty real icosahedral shells both satisfying and violating the paradigmatic Caspar-Klug model. We uncover a striking correspondence between the protein mass centers in the considered shells and the centers of disks in the close packings. To generalize the packing model, we consider proteins with a weak shape anisotropy and propose an interaction energy, minimization of which allows us to obtain spherical dense packings of slightly anisotropic structural units. In the case of strong anisotropy, we model the proteins as sequences of overlapping discs of different sizes, with minimum energy configuration not only resulting in packings, accurately reproducing locations and orientations of individual proteins, but also revealing that icosahedral packings that display the handedness of real capsids are energetically more favorable. Finally, by introducing effective disc charges, we rationalize the formation of inter-protein bonds in protein shells. Analyzing anisotropy of protein shapes, we reveal energy and symmetry reasons controlling capsid structures, including their handedness and interprotein bonds.

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