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Evidence is emerging that changes in the structural and mechanical properties of viral particles are closely linked and that such changes are essential to infectivity. Here, applying the nanostructural and nanomechanical approach of atomic force microscopy, we visualised capsids of the ubiquitous human pathogen herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) at nano-scale resolution in physiologically relevant conditions. Simultaneously performed nano-indentation measurements on genome-containing and genome-free capsids revealed that genome-containing HSV-1 capsids withstand an exceptionally large mechanical force of
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JCS ePress
online publication date 17 Jun 2008
doi: 10.1242/jcs.032284
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jcs.032284v1
121/14/2287
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Research Article
Exceptional mechanical and structural stability of HSV-1 unveiled with fluid atomic force microscopy
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: shahin{at}uni-muenster.de)
6 nN, which is three times larger than the highest values previously reported for other viruses. Greater mechanical forces, however, led to a release of the viral genome. The resulting genome-free capsids, which largely retained their overall structure, were found to be utterly elastic. HSV-1 capsids thus exhibit an exceptional structural and mechanical stability, which is largely provided by the densely packaged genome. This stability might be the key determinant for capsid survival over long distances in the axonal cytoplasm where it is exposed to mechanical forces by molecular motors before it reaches the nuclear pore for crucial genome uncoating.
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W. H. Roos, K. Radtke, E. Kniesmeijer, H. Geertsema, B. Sodeik, and G. J. L. Wuite
Scaffold expulsion and genome packaging trigger stabilization of herpes simplex virus capsids
PNAS,
June 16, 2009;
106(24):
9673 - 9678.
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