4.8 Article

Mechanics of Viral Chromatin Reveals the Pressurization of Human Adenovirus

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 9, Issue 11, Pages 10826-10833

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.5b03417

Keywords

viral mini-chromosome; DNA-protein condensate; DNA compaction; virus core; physical virology; atomic force microscopy; nanoindentation; force curve; virus maturation

Funding

  1. Spanish Interdisciplinary Network on the Biophysics of Viruses (Biofivinet) [FIS2011-16090-E]
  2. Spanish Adenovirus Network (AdenoNet) [BIO2015-68990-REDT]
  3. Thematic Network on Physical Virology from the Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad of Spain [FIS2015-71108-REDT]
  4. [FIS2011-29493]
  5. [FIS2014-59562-R]
  6. [FIS2011-22603]
  7. [SGR14-1354]
  8. [BFU2010-16382]
  9. [BFU2013-41249-P]

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Tight confinement of naked genomes within some viruses results in high internal pressure that facilitates their translocation into the host. Adenovirus, however, encodes histone-like proteins that associate with its genome resulting in a confined DNA protein condensate (core). Cleavage of these proteins during maturation decreases core condensation and primes the virion for maturation proper uncoating via unidentified mechanisms. Here we open individual, mature and immature adenovirus cages to directly probe the mechanics of their chromatin-like cores. We find that immature cores are more rigid than the mature ones, unveiling a mechanical signature of their condensation level. Conversely, intact mature particles demonstrate more rigidity than immature or empty ones. DNA-condensing polyamines revert the mechanics of mature capsid and cores to near-immature values. The combination of these experiments reveals the pressurization of adenovirus particles induced by maturation. We estimate a pressure of similar to 30 atm by continuous elasticity, which is corroborated by modeling the adenovirus mini-chromosome as a confined compact polymer. We propose this pressurization as a mechanism that facilitates initiating the stepwise disassembly of the mature particle, enabling its escape from the endosome and final genome release at the nuclear pore.

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