Characterization of the folding transition in polypeptides and assessing the thermodynamic stability of their structured folds are of primary importance for approaching the problem of protein folding. We use molecular dynamics simulations for a coarse grained polypeptide model in order to (1) obtain the equilibrium conformation diagram of homopolypeptides in a broad range of the chain lengths, N = 10, ..., 100, and temperatures, T (in a multicanonical ensemble), and (2) determine free energy profiles (FEPs) projected onto an optimal, so-called "natural", reaction coordinate that preserves the height of barriers and the diffusion coefficients on the underlying free energy hyper-surface. We then address the following fundamental questions. (i) How well does a kinetically determined free energy landscape of a single chain represent the polypeptide equilibrium (ensemble) behavior? In particular, under which conditions might the correspondence be lost, and what are the possible implications for the folding processes? (ii) How does the free energy landscape depend on the chain length (homopolypeptides) and the monomer interaction sequence (heteropolypeptides)? Our data reveal that at low T values equilibrium structures adopted by relatively short homopolypeptides (N < 60) are dominated by α-helical folds which correspond to the primary and secondary minima of the FEP. In contrast, longer homopolypeptides (N > 70), upon quasi-equilibrium cooling, fold preferentially in β-bundles with small helical portions, while the FEPs exhibit no distinct global minima. Moreover, subject to the choice of the initial configuration, at sufficiently low T, essentially metastable structures can be found and prevail far from the true thermodynamic equilibrium. We also show that, by sequence-enabling the polypeptide model, it is possible to restrict the chain to a very specific part of the configuration space, which results in substantial simplification and smoothing of the free energy landscape as compared to the case of the corresponding homopolypeptide.
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Langmuir
January 2025
Department of Environmental Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, School of Advanced Engineering, Kogakuin University, 2665-1 Nakano, Tokyo, Hachioji 192-0015, Japan.
The two-dimensional interlayer space of layered materials has been highlighted due to their adsorption property, whose nanostructure in the water-immersed state is scarcely understood by experiment. Recent developments in molecular simulation have enabled researchers to investigate the interlayer structure, but water content is necessary for accurate modeling. In the present study, we proposed a theoretical method to estimate the saturated water content and adsorption selectivity of trichlorophenol and phenol in montmorillonite modified with hexadecyltrimethylammonium ions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiotechnol Notes
November 2024
Department of Chemical Engineering, Tsinghua University, Beijing 100084, China.
Cell-free synthetic biology aims at the targeted replication, design, and modification of life processes in open systems by breaking free of constraints such as cell membrane barriers and living cell growth. The beginnings of this systematized technology, which took place in the last century, were used to explore the secrets of life. Currently, with its easy integration with other technologies or disciplines, cell-free synthetic biology is developing into a powerful and effective means of understanding, exploiting, and extending the structure and function of natural living systems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFShort linear peptide motifs play important roles in cell signaling. They can act as modification sites for enzymes and as recognition sites for peptide binding domains. SH2 domains bind specifically to tyrosine-phosphorylated proteins, with the affinity of the interaction depending strongly on the flanking sequence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe growing body of experimental and computational studies suggested that the cross-neutralization antibody activity against Omicron variants may be driven by balance and tradeoff of multiple energetic factors and interaction contributions of the evolving escape hotspots involved in antigenic drift and convergent evolution. However, the dynamic and energetic details quantifying the balance and contribution of these factors, particularly the balancing nature of specific interactions formed by antibodies with the epitope residues remain scarcely characterized. In this study, we performed molecular dynamics simulations, ensemble-based deep mutational scanning of SARS-CoV-2 spike residues and binding free energy computations for two distinct groups of broadly neutralizing antibodies : E1 group (BD55-3152, BD55-3546 and BD5-5840) and F3 group (BD55-3372, BD55-4637 and BD55-5514).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: Sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG) and testosterone are differentially associated with type 2 diabetes (T2D) risk. We investigated whether these associations differ by HIV and menopausal status in Black South African women living with (WLWH) and without HIV (WLWOH).
Design: Cross-sectional observational.
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