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Dive into the research topics where Roya Zandi is active.

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Featured researches published by Roya Zandi.


Physical Review E | 2005

Mechanical Properties of Viral Capsids

Roya Zandi; David Reguera

Viruses are known to tolerate wide ranges of pH and salt conditions and to withstand internal pressures as high as 100 atmospheres . In this paper we investigate the mechanical properties of viral capsids, calling explicit attention to the inhomogeneity of the shells that is inherent to their discrete and polyhedral nature. We calculate the distribution of stress in these capsids and analyze their response to isotropic internal pressure (arising, for instance, from genome confinement and/or osmotic activity). We compare our results with appropriate generalizations of classical (i.e., continuum) elasticity theory. We also examine competing mechanisms for viral shell failure, e.g., in-plane crack formation vs radial bursting. The biological consequences of the special stabilities and stress distributions of viral capsids are also discussed.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

What drives the translocation of stiff chains

Roya Zandi; David Reguera; Joseph Rudnick; William M. Gelbart

We study the dynamics of the passage of a stiff chain through a pore into a cell containing particles that bind reversibly to it. Using Brownian molecular dynamics simulations we investigate the mean first-passage time as a function of the length of the chain inside for different concentrations of binding particles. As a consequence of the interactions with these particles, the chain experiences a net force along its length whose calculated value from the simulations accounts for the velocity at which it enters the cell. This force can in turn be obtained from the solution of a generalized diffusion equation incorporating an effective Langmuir adsorption free energy for the chain plus binding particles. These results suggest a role of binding particles in the translocation process that is in general quite different from that of a Brownian ratchet. Furthermore, nonequilibrium effects contribute significantly to the dynamics; e.g., the chain often enters the cell faster than particle binding can be saturated, resulting in a force several times smaller than the equilibrium value.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2013

Unclosed HIV-1 Capsids Suggest a Curled Sheet Model of Assembly

Zhiheng Yu; Megan J. Dobro; Cora L. Woodward; Artem Levandovsky; Cindy M. Danielson; Virginie Sandrin; Jiong Shi; Christopher Aiken; Roya Zandi; Thomas J. Hope; Grant J. Jensen

The RNA genome of retroviruses is encased within a protein capsid. To gather insight into the assembly and function of this capsid, we used electron cryotomography to image human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV) particles. While the majority of viral cores appeared closed, a variety of unclosed structures including rolled sheets, extra flaps, and cores with holes in the tip were also seen. Simulations of nonequilibrium growth of elastic sheets recapitulated each of these aberrations and further predicted the occasional presence of seams, for which tentative evidence was also found within the cryotomograms. To test the integrity of viral capsids in vivo, we observed that ~25% of cytoplasmic HIV complexes captured by TRIM5α had holes large enough to allow internal green fluorescent protein (GFP) molecules to escape. Together, these findings suggest that HIV assembly at least sometimes involves the union in space of two edges of a curling sheet and results in a substantial number of unclosed forms.


Biophysical Journal | 2009

Size Regulation of ss-RNA Viruses

Roya Zandi; Ppam Paul van der Schoot

While a monodisperse size distribution is common within one kind of spherical virus, the size of viral shells varies from one type of virus to another. In this article, we investigate the physical mechanisms underlying the size selection among spherical viruses. In particular, we study the effect of genome length and genome and protein concentrations on the size of spherical viral capsids in the absence of spontaneous curvature and bending energy. We find that the coat proteins could well adjust the size of the shell to the size of their genome, which in turn depends on the number of charges on it. Furthermore, we find that different stoichiometric mixtures of proteins and genome can produce virus particles of various sizes, consistent with in vitro experiments.


Physical Biology | 2007

Kinetic theory of virus capsid assembly

Ppam Paul van der Schoot; Roya Zandi

A phenomenological theory is presented for the kinetics of the in vitro assembly and disassembly of icosahedral virus capsids in solutions of coat proteins. The focus is on conditions where nucleation-type processes can be ignored. We find that the kinetics of assembly is strongly concentration dependent and that the late-stage relaxation time varies as the inverse of the square of the concentration. These findings are corroborated by experimental observations on a number of viruses. Further, our theory shows that hysteresis observed in some experiments could be a direct effect of the kinetics of a high-order mass action law, not necessarily the result of a free energy barrier between assembled and disassembled states.


Biophysical Journal | 2014

Nuclear Pore Complex Protein Sequences Determine Overall Copolymer Brush Structure and Function

David Ando; Roya Zandi; Yong Woon Kim; Michael E. Colvin; Michael Rexach; Ajay Gopinathan

The transport of cargo across the nuclear membrane is highly selective and accomplished by a poorly understood mechanism involving hundreds of nucleoporins lining the inside of the nuclear pore complex (NPC). Currently, there is no clear picture of the overall structure formed by this collection of proteins within the pore, primarily due to their disordered nature. We perform coarse-grained simulations of both individual nucleoporins and grafted rings of nups mimicking the in vivo geometry of the NPC and supplement this with polymer brush modeling. Our results indicate that different regions or blocks of an individual NPC protein can have distinctly different forms of disorder and that this property appears to be a conserved functional feature. Furthermore, this block structure at the individual protein level is critical to the formation of a unique higher-order polymer brush architecture that can exist in distinct morphologies depending on the effective interaction energy between the phenylalanine glycine (FG) domains of different nups. Because the interactions between FG domains may be modulated by certain forms of transport factors, our results indicate that transitions between brush morphologies could play an important role in regulating transport across the NPC, suggesting novel forms of gated transport across membrane pores with wide biomimetic applicability.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Optimal architectures of elongated viruses

Antoni Luque; Roya Zandi; David Reguera

Many viruses protect their genetic material by a closed elongated protein shell. Unlike spherical viruses, the structure of these prolates is not yet well understood, and only a few of them have been fully characterized. We present the results of a simple phenomenological model, which describes the remarkable structures of prolate or bacilliform viral shells. Surprisingly, we find that the special well-defined geometry of these elongated viruses arises just as a consequence of free-energy minimization of a generic interaction between the structural units of the capsid. Hemispherical T-number caps centered along the 5-, 3-, and 2-fold axes with hexagonally ordered cylindrical bodies are found to be local energy minima, thus justifying their occurrence as optimal viral structures. Moreover, closed elongated viruses show a sequence of magic numbers for the end-caps, leading to strict selection rules for the length and structure of the body as well as for the number of capsomers and proteins of the capsid. The model reproduces the architecture of spherical and bacilliform viruses, both in vivo and in vitro, and constitutes an important step towards understanding viral assembly and its potential control for biological and nanotechnological applications.


Physical Review E | 2010

Thermodynamics of nanospheres encapsulated in virus capsids

Antonio Šiber; Roya Zandi; Rudolf Podgornik

We investigate the thermodynamics of complexation of functionalized charged nanospheres with viral proteins. The physics of this problem is governed not only by electrostatic interaction between the proteins and the nanosphere cores (screened by salt ions), but also by configurational degrees of freedom of the charged protein N tails. We approach the problem by constructing an appropriate complexation free-energy functional. On the basis of both numerical and analytical studies of this functional we construct the phase diagram for the assembly which contains the information on the assembled structures that appear in the thermodynamical equilibrium, depending on the size and surface charge density of the nanosphere cores. We show that both the nanosphere core charge and its radius determine the size of the capsid that forms around the core.


Physical Review E | 2014

RNA topology remolds electrostatic stabilization of viruses

Gonca Erdemci-Tandogan; Jef Wagner; Paul van der Schoot; Rudolf Podgornik; Roya Zandi

Simple RNA viruses efficiently encapsulate their genome into a nano-sized protein shell: the capsid. Spontaneous coassembly of the genome and the capsid proteins is driven predominantly by electrostatic interactions between the negatively charged RNA and the positively charged inner capsid wall. Using field theoretic formulation we show that the inherently branched RNA secondary structure allows viruses to maximize the amount of encapsulated genome and make assembly more efficient, allowing viral RNAs to out-compete cellular RNAs during replication in infected host cells.


Physical Review Letters | 2011

Fluctuation-induced forces between inclusions in a fluid membrane under tension

Hsiang-Ku Lin; Roya Zandi; U. Mohideen; Leonid P. Pryadko

We develop an exact method to calculate thermal Casimir forces between inclusions of arbitrary shapes and separation, embedded in a fluid membrane whose fluctuations are governed by the combined action of surface tension, bending modulus, and Gaussian rigidity. Each objects shape and mechanical properties enter only through a characteristic matrix, a static analog of the scattering matrix. We calculate the Casimir interaction between two elastic disks embedded in a membrane. In particular, we find that at short separations the interaction is strong and independent of surface tension.

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Joseph Rudnick

University of California

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Jef Wagner

University of California

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U. Mohideen

University of California

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Paul van der Schoot

Eindhoven University of Technology

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Hsiang-Ku Lin

University of California

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Mehran Kardar

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Siyu Li

University of California

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