Issue 36, 2024

Reshaping and enzymatic activity may allow viruses to move through the mucus

Abstract

Filamentous viruses like influenza and torovirus often display systematic bends and arcs of mysterious physical origin. We propose that such viruses undergo an instability from a cylindrically symmetric to a toroidally curved state. This “toro-elastic” state emerges via spontaneous symmetry breaking under prestress due to short range spike protein interactions magnified by surface topography. Once surface stresses are sufficiently large, the filament buckles and the curved state constitutes a soft mode that can potentially propagate through the filament's material frame around a Mexican-hat-type potential. In the mucus of our airways, which constitutes a soft, porous 3D network, glycan chains are omnipresent and influenza's spike proteins are known to efficiently bind and cut them. We next show that such a non-equilibrium enzymatic reaction can induce spontaneous rotation of the curved state, leading to a whole body reshaping propulsion similar to – but different from – eukaryotic flagella and spirochetes.

Graphical abstract: Reshaping and enzymatic activity may allow viruses to move through the mucus

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
17 May 2024
Accepted
21 Aug 2024
First published
23 Aug 2024
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Soft Matter, 2024,20, 7185-7198

Reshaping and enzymatic activity may allow viruses to move through the mucus

F. Ziebert, K. G. Dokonon and I. M. Kulić, Soft Matter, 2024, 20, 7185 DOI: 10.1039/D4SM00592A

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