Polymer Translocation and Packaging: Role of Flickering Pores, Time-Dependent Driving, and Capsid Shapes
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Abstract
The translocation of biopolymers across nanopores is an ubiquitous process in bi
ology. Examples range from the transport of RNA through a nuclear membrane pore
complex, viral ejection of DNA into host cells, and protein transport through membrane
channels. One of the principal reasons for studying polymer translocation is to create
effective biosequencing methods, such as the detection of a DNA sequence. The poly
mer is field-driven across the pore, and the translocating polymer segment is mapped
from the ionic current perturbations. In order to achieve precise control in the detection
process, we need to control the polymer-pore interactions and pore geometry. Within
this framework, theoretical models have yielded significant insights into how polymer
properties, pore characteristics, interactions between polymers, and external drive af
fect translocation dynamics. Polymer translocation also plays a key role in gene therapy
and controlled drug delivery.
There are various scenarios in biological nanopores, such as the twin pore complex in
the inner membrane of mitochondria and the nuclear pore complex (NPC), where the
pore size can change during protein translocation. In the realm of synthetic nanopore
design, elastomeric nanochannel devices have been utilized to adjust the width of the
channels by applying mechanical stresses. To replicate the behavior of these systems,
as in our first study, we investigated the driven translocation of a semiflexible polymer
through an attractive extended pore with a periodically oscillating width. Theoretical
studies of polymer translocation through pores with dynamically changing widths have
shown that the translocation can be significantly improved compared to that of a static
pore. Comparing the average translocation time for an oscillating pore (τosc) with that
of a static pore (τstat), we showed that semiflexible polymers translocate more effi
ciently through oscillating pores than through static ones. However, the gain defined
as η = τstat/τosc, is highly influenced by the stiffness of the polymer and the attractive
properties of the pores. We explored the interplay between the pore-polymer interac
tion (parameterized by ϵ) and the stiffness of the polymer (parameterized by κ) on the
translocation efficiency. We observed a gain reversal in translocation efficiency. For a
lower strength of the pore-polymer interaction, the gain decreases with increasing κ at
lower values of κ and saturates at higher values. In contrast, at a higher strength of
the pore-polymer interaction, the gain increases with increasing κ at higher values of κ
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and saturates at lower values. This intriguing reversal, which occurs independently of
the dimensionality of the problem, is explored in the parameter space of driving force,
chain stiffness, and pore stickiness.
In various in vivo situations, translocation involves time-varying processes, such as
f
luctuations in membrane potential and ionic strengths, and variations in ATP concen
trations in molecular motor-assisted translocation events. In such cases, theoretical
modeling proceeds by assuming a time-varying driving force. This situation is similar
to choosing a fluctuating pore width and shows resonant behavior at an optimal driving
frequency. Although theoretical studies have explored the role of pore-polymer inter
actions in the translocation of biopolymers under time-dependent driving forces, such
studies have considered pores where pore-polymer interactions vary uniformly across
them. However, varying pore-polymer interactions along the length of the channel
have shown dramatic variations in the translocation time distributions under constant
external drive. The translocation time of a polymer through a channel with alternate
charged and uncharged sections has been shown to depend nonmonotonically on the
length of the charged section. In addition, chain heterogeneity, in which segments of
the polymer interact differently with pores, has shown prospects for DNA sequencing
using solid-state nanopores with tailored surface properties. Heterogeneity has been
introduced as the polymer segments that experience different driving forces, polymers
with different friction interactions with pores, polymers with varying pore-polymer in
teractions along their lengths, and polymers with periodic varying stiffness. The latter
is significant because experimental studies have shown the importance of sequence
dependent bending rigidity for DNA-protein interaction and nucleosome positioning.
In our second study, we present a detailed picture of the dynamics of polymer translo
cation through variously patterned pores in the presence of an external force that pe
riodically varies. We consider both homopolymers, which are uniformly semiflexible,
and heteropolymers, with alternate stiff and flexible segments. Similarly to previous
investigations, the gain in translocation time for homopolymers exhibits oscillations
with the frequency of the external periodic force. Although the gain varies significantly
with chain stiffness for a uniformly attractive pore, these changes are negligible for
pores with varying interactions. This behavior with variably structured pores is further
characterized using the mean translocation time and waiting time distributions. For
heteropolymers, there are notable differences in the waiting-time distribution between
various pores, and for varying oscillation frequencies depending on the block length of
the stiff/flexible segment. We employ these differences in a sequencing technique to in
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vestigate the potential for detecting heteropolymers by allowing them to pass through
numerous pores. We demonstrate how the combination of periodic forcing, chain het
erogeneity, and pore patterning can help with sequence detection.
Bacteriophages house DNA in capsids of various shapes and sizes and eject DNA into
host cells once the capsid is opened. Since packed DNA is enclosed in a capsid that
is usually smaller than the persistence length of the DNA, it is subject to significant
energy and entropic penalties. There is a tremendous build-up of internal pressure
that is used by viruses or bacteriophages. Typically, bacteriophages attach themselves
to the surface of a bacterium and use the internal pressure that releases the phage’s
DNA when its capsid is opened to eject their genome into the cytoplasm of the host.
There is a great variation in the shape of viral capsids. Shapes range from spherical or
quasi-spherical for phage DNA which infects prokaryotes to more elongated shapes for
viruses affecting eukaryotes. Theoretical studies have studied the impact of different
capsid geometries on the packaging and ejection dynamics of polymers of different
f
lexibility. In addition, such situations often involve ATP hydrolysis to facilitate transfer.
Therefore, it is necessary to look at the translocation process in the presence of active
forces.
In our third study, we considered the biomimetic packaging of an active semiflexi
ble polymer in spherical and ellipsoidal capsids of the same internal volume. Active
polymers show different conformational and dynamical properties compared to those
of passive ones. We studied the impact of capsid geometry and activity on the poly
mer packaging and ejection dynamics. For a passive polymer, we observe that as the
sphericity of the capsid increases, the packing time decreases monotonically, indicating
that a spherical capsid is packed more easily than other shapes. A semiflexible poly
mer packs slower than a flexible one. Although activity has a minimal effect on the
qualitative behavior of packing and unpacking, the rate of packing and unpacking is
significantly affected in the presence of activity. Like the packing time, the ejection
time increases with capsid sphericity. For the packing of a semiflexible polymer, we
observed prominent peaks in the mean waiting times for capsid geometries with low
sphericities.