Published May 1, 2018
| Version v1
Journal article
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Two-Stage Dynamics of In Vivo Bacteriophage Genome Ejection
Creators
- 1. California Institute of Technology
- 2. University of California, Los Angeles
- 3. University of Chicago
- 4. Utrecht University
Description
Biopolymer translocation is a key step in viral infection processes. The transfer of information-encoding genomes allows viruses to reprogram the cell fate of their hosts. Constituting 96% of all known bacterial viruses [A. Fokine and M. G. Rossmann, Molecular architecture of tailed double-stranded DNA phages, Bacteriophage 4, e28281 (2014)], the tailed bacteriophages deliver their DNA into host cells via an "ejection" process, leaving their protein shells outside of the bacteria; a similar scenario occurs for mammalian viruses like herpes, where the DNA genome is ejected into the nucleus of host cells, while the viral capsid remains bound outside to a nuclear-pore complex. In light of previous experimental measurements of in vivo bacteriophage λ ejection, we analyze here the physical processes that give rise to the observed dynamics. We propose that, after an initial phase driven by self-repulsion of DNA in the capsid, the ejection is driven by anomalous diffusion of phage DNA in the crowded bacterial cytoplasm. We expect that this two-step mechanism is general for phages that operate by pressure-driven ejection, and we discuss predictions of our theory to be tested in future experiments.
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PhysRevX.8.021029.pdf
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Additional details
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1103/PhysRevX.8.021029
- Other
- oai:uchicago.tind.io:11427
Funding
- La Fondation Pierre-Gilles de Gennes
- National Science Foundation
- CHE1051507
- National Institutes of Health
- 1R35 GM118043-01
- National Science Foundation
- 1161803
- James S. McDonnell Foundation
- Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research
- National Institutes of Health
- DP1 OD000217
- National Institutes of Health
- F32 HL134288
- National Institutes of Health
- R01 GM085286