Author/Authors :
Melissa M. Gibbons، نويسنده , , William S. Klug, Michael R. Cummings، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
As revealed by techniques of structural biology
and single-molecule experimentation, the protein shells of
viruses (capsids) are some of nature’s best examples of
highly symmetric multiscale self-assembled structures, with
impressive mechanical properties of strength and elasticity.
Mechanical models of viral capsids built ‘‘from the bottom
up,’’ i.e., from all-atom models in the context of molecular
dynamics and normal mode analysis, have chiefly focused
on unforced vibrational capsid dynamics. Due to the size of
viral capsids, which can contain several hundred thousand
atoms, the computer power needed for these types of
methods has only recently reached the level required for allatom
simulations of entire viral capsids. Coarse-grained
normal mode analysis has provided a simplified means of
studying the unforced vibrational dynamics of viral capsids.
Recent focus on ‘‘top-down’’ mechanical models of viral
capsids based on two- and three-dimensional continuum
elasticity have provided a theoretical complement to single
molecule experiments such as atomic force microscopy, and
have advanced the fundamental understanding of the forced
mechanics. This review serves to assess the current state of
modeling techniques for the study of the mechanics of viral
capsids, and to highlight some of the key insights gained
from such modeling. In particular, a theme is established
of a link between shape—or geometry—and the global
mechanical properties of these hierarchical multiscale
biological structures.