Publications by authors named "W F van Gunsteren"

More than a half century ago it became feasible to simulate, using classical-mechanical equations of motion, the dynamics of molecular systems on a computer. Since then classical-physical molecular simulation has become an integral part of chemical research. It is widely applied in a variety of branches of chemistry and has significantly contributed to the development of chemical knowledge.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A method for structure refinement of molecules based on residual dipolar coupling (RDC) data is proposed. It calculates RDC values using magnetic-field rotational sampling of the rotational degrees of freedom of a molecule in conjunction with molecule-internal configurational sampling. By applying rotational sampling, as is occurring in the experiment, leading to observable RDCs, the method stays close to the experiment.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • * Two models of a small molecule, one rigid and one flexible, are used to test the assumptions that internal and rotational motions are decoupled and that the molecule is rigid.
  • * The findings suggest that the rigid model can reproduce the target RDC values, but struggles with orientation distribution, while the flexible model fails to reproduce both target RDC values and orientation distribution, highlighting challenges in studying flexible biomolecules.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A method for structure refinement of molecules based on residual dipolar coupling (RDC) data is proposed. It calculates RDC values using rotational and molecule-internal configurational sampling instead of the common refinement procedure that is based on the approximation of the nonuniform rotational distribution of the molecule by a single alignment tensor representing the average nonuniformity of this distribution. Using rotational sampling, as is occurring in the experiment leading to observable RDCs, the method stays close to the experiment.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In protein simulation or structure refinement based on values of observable quantities measured in (aqueous) solution, solvent (water) molecules may be explicitly treated, omitted, or represented by a potential of mean-solvation-force term, depending on protein coordinates only, in the force field used. These three approaches are compared for hen egg white lysozyme (HEWL). This 129-residue non-spherical protein contains a variety of secondary-structure elements, and ample experimental data are available: 1630 atom-atom Nuclear Overhauser Enhancement (NOE) upper distance bounds, 213  J-couplings and 200 S order parameters.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF