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Packaging stiff polymers in small containers: A molecular dynamics study

Biomolecules 2016-10-12 v2 Soft Condensed Matter Biological Physics

Abstract

The question of how stiff polymers are able to pack into small containers is particularly relevant to the study of DNA packaging in viruses. A reduced version of the problem based on coarse-grained representations of the main components of the system -- the DNA polymer and the spherical viral capsid -- has been studied by molecular dynamics simulation. The results, involving longer polymers than in earlier work, show that as polymers become more rigid there is an increasing tendency to self-organize as spools that wrap from the inside out, rather than the inverse direction seen previously. In the final state, a substantial part of the polymer is packed into one or more coaxial spools, concentrically layered with different orientations, a form of packaging achievable without twisting the polymer.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1606.07221,
  title  = {Packaging stiff polymers in small containers: A molecular dynamics study},
  author = {D. C. Rapaport},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1606.07221},
  year   = {2016}
}

Comments

4 pages, 4 figures (minor changes in revised version)

R2 v1 2026-06-22T14:32:24.806Z