Osmotic pressure: resisting or promoting DNA ejection from phage? Internal capsid-pressure dependence of viral infection
ORAL
Abstract
Recent\textit{ in vitro }experiments have shown that DNA ejection from phage can be partially stopped by surrounding osmotic pressure when ejected DNA is digested by DNase I on the course of ejection. We argue in this work by combination of experimental techniques (UV absorbance, pulse-field electrophoresis, and cryo-EM) that intact genome ($i.e$. \textit{undigested}) ejection in a crowded environment is, on the contrary, enhanced or eventually complete with the help of a pulling force resulting from DNA condensation induced by the osmotic stress itself. This demonstrates that in vivo, the osmotically stressed cell cytoplasm will promote phage DNA ejection rather than resisting it. While, in vitro, the ejection depends sensitively on internal pressure within the virus capsid, the effect of internal pressure on infection of bacteria is unknown. We use microfluidics to monitor individual cells and determine the distribution of lysis due to infection as the capsid pressure is varied. The lysis probability decreases markedly with decreased capsid pressure.
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Authors
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Alex Evilevitch
Lund University, Department of Biochemistry, Lund University, Sweden
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Meerim Jeembaeva
Department of Biochemistry, Lund University, Sweden
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Sarah Koester
Department of Physics, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA
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Martin Castelnovo
Laboratoire de Physique, Ecole Normale Superieure de Lyon, France
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David Weitz
Harvard University, SEAS, Harvard, Department of Physics, School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard University, Department of Physics, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, Harvard