Abstract

In many viruses DNA is packaged to high densities, resulting in high “internal force” inside the capsid shell. This helps drive DNA ejection through the portal channel when viruses infect cells. Imaging of the in vitro ejection of fluorescent-labeled DNA from phages T5 and lambda found that it was initially slow despite the internal force being highest when the capsid is full. This was attributed to hydrodynamic drag on the tightly-packed DNA, but this hypothesis has not been tested. Here we introduce a new method for probing the DNA mobility by using optical tweezers to pull it out from phage phi29 capsids. This allows us to measure the dynamics with higher precision, avoid using DNA-binding dyes that alter the dynamics, and apply variable forces. We measure even slower DNA exit than reported previously, a steeper, exponential velocity increase as the first 20% of the genome length exits, and find that exit velocity is not proportional to driving force as expected for hydrodynamic friction. Rather, our findings are consistent with theoretical predictions for DNA-DNA sliding friction. We also observe large heterogeneity in the exit dynamics and stochastic pausing, indicating that ejection is a nonequilibrium process, in qualitative agreement with simulations. Features of the pausing suggest it is related to the phenomenon of “clogging” in soft-matter physics, which occurs in the flow of disordered materials through constrictions. Our results indicate that intramolecular friction and nonequilibrium pausing control the kinetics of ejection but that this friction does not significantly affect DNA packaging.

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