Monitoring Assembly of Virus Capsids with Nanofluidic Devices

ACS Nano. 2015 Sep 22;9(9):9087-96. doi: 10.1021/acsnano.5b03231. Epub 2015 Aug 26.

Abstract

Virus assembly is a coordinated process in which typically hundreds of subunits react to form complex, symmetric particles. We use resistive-pulse sensing to characterize the assembly of hepatitis B virus core protein dimers into T = 3 and T = 4 icosahedral capsids. This technique counts and sizes intermediates and capsids in real time, with single-particle sensitivity, and at biologically relevant concentrations. Other methods are not able to produce comparable real-time, single-particle observations of assembly reactions below, near, and above the pseudocritical dimer concentration, at which the dimer and capsid concentrations are approximately equal. Assembly reactions across a range of dimer concentrations reveal three distinct patterns. At dimer concentrations as low as 50 nM, well below the pseudocritical dimer concentration of 0.5 μM, we observe a switch in the ratio of T = 3 to T = 4 capsids, which increases with decreasing dimer concentration. Far above the pseudocritical dimer concentration, kinetically trapped, incomplete T = 4 particles assemble rapidly, then slowly anneal into T = 4 capsids. At all dimer concentrations tested, T = 3 capsids form more rapidly than T = 4 capsids, suggesting distinct pathways for the two forms.

Keywords: hepatitis B virus; in-plane nanochannel; nanofluidics; resistive-pulse sensing; self-assembly; single-particle counting.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Capsid / chemistry
  • Capsid / metabolism
  • Capsid Proteins / chemistry*
  • Capsid Proteins / metabolism
  • Hepatitis B virus / chemistry*
  • Hepatitis B virus / metabolism
  • Kinetics
  • Protein Multimerization
  • Virion / chemistry
  • Virion / metabolism
  • Virus Assembly*

Substances

  • Capsid Proteins