AbstractThe mechanical properties of viral shells are crucial for viral assembly and infection. To study their distribution and heterogeneity on the viral surface, we performed atomistic force-probe molecular dynamics simulations of the complete shell of southern bean mosaic virus, a prototypical T = 3 virus, in explicit solvent. The simulation system comprised more than 4,500,000 atoms. To facilitate direct comparison with atomic-force microscopy (AFM) measurements, a Lennard-Jones sphere was used as a model of the AFM tip, and was pushed with different velocities toward the capsid protein at 19 different positions on the viral surface. A detailed picture of the spatial distribution of elastic constants and yielding forces was obtained tha...
Atomic force microscopy has recently provided highly precise measurements of mechanical properties o...
Viruses are in many ways fascinating biological systems. They vary in their structure, their replica...
AbstractThe current rapid growth in the use of nanosized particles is fueled in part by our increase...
AbstractA series of recent nanoindentation experiments on the protein shells (capsids) of viruses ha...
AbstractVirus capsids and crystalline surfactant vesicles are two examples of self-assembled shells ...
Viruses are an important subject to biological research. In particular their astonishing ability to ...
Die mechanischen Eigenschaften von Virushüllen sind entscheidende Faktoren bei dem virale...
A coarse-grained model is used to study the mechanical response of 35 virus capsids of symmetries T ...
Viruses are nanosized, genome-filled protein containers with remarkable thermodynamic and mechanical...
Recent Atomic Force Microscope (AFM) nanoindentation experiments measuring mechanical response of th...
Virus capsids and crystalline surfactant vesicles are two examples of self-assembled shells in the n...
The effects of changes in the loading rate during the forced dissociation of single bonds have been ...
AbstractAtomic force microscopy has recently provided highly precise measurements of mechanical prop...
Virus capsids are protein shells that protect the virus genome, and determination of their mechanica...
We present our results on the manipulation of individual viruses using an advanced interface for ato...
Atomic force microscopy has recently provided highly precise measurements of mechanical properties o...
Viruses are in many ways fascinating biological systems. They vary in their structure, their replica...
AbstractThe current rapid growth in the use of nanosized particles is fueled in part by our increase...
AbstractA series of recent nanoindentation experiments on the protein shells (capsids) of viruses ha...
AbstractVirus capsids and crystalline surfactant vesicles are two examples of self-assembled shells ...
Viruses are an important subject to biological research. In particular their astonishing ability to ...
Die mechanischen Eigenschaften von Virushüllen sind entscheidende Faktoren bei dem virale...
A coarse-grained model is used to study the mechanical response of 35 virus capsids of symmetries T ...
Viruses are nanosized, genome-filled protein containers with remarkable thermodynamic and mechanical...
Recent Atomic Force Microscope (AFM) nanoindentation experiments measuring mechanical response of th...
Virus capsids and crystalline surfactant vesicles are two examples of self-assembled shells in the n...
The effects of changes in the loading rate during the forced dissociation of single bonds have been ...
AbstractAtomic force microscopy has recently provided highly precise measurements of mechanical prop...
Virus capsids are protein shells that protect the virus genome, and determination of their mechanica...
We present our results on the manipulation of individual viruses using an advanced interface for ato...
Atomic force microscopy has recently provided highly precise measurements of mechanical properties o...
Viruses are in many ways fascinating biological systems. They vary in their structure, their replica...
AbstractThe current rapid growth in the use of nanosized particles is fueled in part by our increase...