Coronavirus peplomer interaction.

Phys Fluids (1994)

Department of Physics, Kim Il Sung University, Taesong District, Pyongyang 999093, Democratic People's Republic of Korea.

Published: November 2022

By virtue of their lack of motility, viruses rely entirely on their own temperature (Brownian motion) to position themselves properly for cell attachment. Spiked viruses use one or more spikes (called peplomers) to attach. The coronavirus uses adjacent peplomer pairs. These peplomers, identically charged, repel one another over the surface of their convex capsids to form beautiful polyhedra. We identify the edges of these polyhedra with the most important peplomer hydrodynamic interactions. These convex capsids may or may not be spherical, and their peplomer population declines with infection time. These peplomers are short, equidimensional, and bulbous with triangular bulbs. In this short paper, we explore the interactions between nearby peplomer bulbs. By interactions, we mean the hydrodynamic interferences between the velocity profiles caused by the drag of the suspending fluid when the virus rotates. We find that these peplomer hydrodynamic interactions raise rotational diffusivity of the virus, and thus affect its ability to infect.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9728042PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/5.0120167DOI Listing

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