Viruses self-assemble from identical capsid proteins and their genome
consisting, for example, of a long single stranded (ss) RNA. For a big class of
T = 3 viruses capsid proteins have long positive N-terminal tails. We explore
the role played by the Coulomb interaction between the brush of positive
N-terminal tails rooted at the inner surface of the capsid and the negative ss
RNA molecule. We show that viruses are most stable when the total contour
length of ss RNA is close to the total length of the tails. For such a
structure the absolute value of the total RNA charge is approximately twice
larger than the charge of the capsid. This conclusion agrees with structural
data.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure