Abstract

Understanding the physical principles underlying the structural organization of the proteinaceous viral shells is of major importance to advance antiviral strategies. Here, we develop a phenomenological thermodynamic theory, which considers structures of small and middle-size icosahedral viral shells as a result of condensation of a minimum number of protein density waves on a spherical surface. Each of these irreducible critical waves has icosahedral symmetry and can be expressed as a specific series of the spherical harmonics Ylm with the same wave number l. As we demonstrate, in small viral shells self-assembled from individual proteins, the maxima of one critical density wave determine the positions of proteins, while the spatial derivatives of the second one control the protein orientations on the shell surface. In contrast to the small shells, the middle-size ones are always formed from pentamers and hexamers (referred to as capsomers). Considering all such structures deposited in the Protein Data Bank, we unexpectedly found that the positions of capsomeres in these shells correspond to the maxima of interference patterns produced by no more than two critical waves with close wave numbers. This fact allows us to explain the observed limit size of the icosahedral shells assembled from pentamers and hexamers. We also construct nonequilibrium thermodynamic potentials describing the protein crystallization and discuss the reasons behind the specific handedness of the viral shells.

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