| Literature DB >> 24359751 |
Ningning Liu1, Ying Chen2, Bo Peng3, Yuan Lin3, Qian Wang4, Zhaohui Su3, Wenke Zhang5, Hongbin Li6, Jiacong Shen2.
Abstract
To explore the disassembly mechanism of tobacco mosaic virus (TMV), a model system for virus study, during infection, we have used single-molecule force spectroscopy to mimic and follow the process of RNA disassembly from the protein coat of TMV by the replisome (molecular motor) in vivo, under different pH and Ca(2+) concentrations. Dynamic force spectroscopy revealed the unbinding free-energy landscapes as that at pH 4.7 the disassembly process is dominated by one free-energy barrier, whereas at pH 7.0 the process is dominated by one barrier and that there exists a second barrier. The additional free-energy barrier at longer distance has been attributed to the hindrance of disordered loops within the inner channel of TMV, and the biological function of those protein loops was discussed. The combination of pH increase and Ca(2+) concentration drop could weaken RNA-protein interactions so much that the molecular motor replisome would be able to pull and disassemble the rest of the genetic RNA from the protein coat in vivo. All these facts provide supporting evidence at the single-molecule level, to our knowledge for the first time, for the cotranslational disassembly mechanism during TMV infection under physiological conditions.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24359751 PMCID: PMC3882505 DOI: 10.1016/j.bpj.2013.10.005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biophys J ISSN: 0006-3495 Impact factor: 4.033