Viral infection might just be a phase… transition

Posted: Published on September 29th, 2014

This post was added by Dr P. Richardson

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

29-Sep-2014

Contact: Jocelyn Duffy jhduffy@andrew.cmu.edu 412-268-9982 Carnegie Mellon University @CMUScience

PITTSBURGHMany double-stranded DNA viruses infect cells by ejecting their genetic information into a host cell. But how does the usually rigid DNA packaged inside a virus' shell flow from the virus to the cell?

In two separate studies, Carnegie Mellon University biophysicist Alex Evilevitch has shown that in viruses that infect both bacteria and humans, a phase transition at the temperature of infection allows the DNA to change from a rigid crystalline structure into a fluid-like structure that facilitates infection.

The findings, published in Nature Chemical Biology and the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), provide a promising new target for antiviral therapies. Most antiviral drugs work by deactivating viral proteins, but viruses often evolve and become drug resistant. Evilevitch believes that researchers now have a possible new way to prevent infection blocking the phase transition. Such a therapy could be generalizable across all types of Herpes viruses, and wouldn't be prone to developing resistance.

"The exciting part of this is that the physical properties of packaged DNA play a very important role in the spread of a viral infection, and those properties are universal," said Evilevitch, an associate professor in Carnegie Mellon's Department of Physics. "This could lead to a therapy that isn't linked to the virus' gene sequence or protein structure, which would make developing resistance to the therapy highly unlikely."

Most viruses, whether they infect bacteria, plants or animals, have fairly similar structures. They consist of an outer shell called a capsid that contains the viral genome either DNA or RNA. In many DNA viruses the long strands of nucleic acid are tightly wound in a crystalline structure. The repulsive forces formed by the layered strands of genetic material exert a large amount of pressure on the capsid, and according to previous research done by Evilevitch, this pressure is ultimately what propels DNA out of a small porthole in the virus's capsid and into a host cell. That hole is no larger than the width of a DNA chain.

In order to find out how DNA could easily escape through such a tiny opening in the capsid, Evilevitch did separate studies on Herpes Simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1), which infects humans, and bacteriophage lambda, which infects bacteria.

In the HSV-1 study, which was published in Nature Chemical Biology, Evilevitch set out to see what physical conditions lead to successful viral infection. Using atomic force microscopy and small angle x-ray scattering (SAXS), he found that both ionic conditions in the cell and temperature could change the fluidity and mobility of the DNA inside a virus. The viral DNA was much more fluid at temperatures close to that of infection (37 degrees Celsius) and at ionic conditions similar to that of neuronal and epithelial cells the same cells that HSV-1 infects.

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Viral infection might just be a phase... transition

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