Developments in atomic force microscopy have opened up a new path toward single-molecular phenomena; in particular, during the process of pulling a membrane protein out of a lipid bilayer. However, the characteristic features of the force-distance (F-D) curve of a bacteriorhodopsin in purple membrane, for instance, have not yet been fully elucidated in terms of physicochemical principles. To address the issue, we performed a computer simulation of bacteriorhodopsin with, to our knowledge, a novel coarse-grained (C-G) model. Peptide planes are represented as rigid spheres, while the surrounding environment consisting of water solvents and lipid bilayers is represented as an implicit continuum. Force-field parameters were determined on the basis of auxiliary simulations and experimental values of transfer free energy of each amino acid from water to membrane. According to Popot's two-stage model, we separated molecular interactions involving membrane proteins into two parts: I) affinity of each amino acid to the membrane and intrahelical hydrogen bonding between main chain peptide bonds; and II) interhelix interactions. Then, only part I was incorporated into the C-G model because we assumed that the part plays a dominant role in the forced unfolding process. As a result, the C-G simulation has successfully reproduced the key features, including peak positions, of the experimental F-D curves in the literature, indicating that the peak positions are essentially determined by the residue-lipid and intrahelix interactions. Furthermore, we investigated the relationships between the energy barrier formation on the forced unfolding pathways and the force peaks of the F-D curves.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5113086PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bpj.2016.09.051DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

forced unfolding
12
c-g model
8
amino acid
8
peak positions
8
f-d curves
8
membrane
5
unfolding mechanism
4
mechanism bacteriorhodopsin
4
bacteriorhodopsin revealed
4
revealed coarse-grained
4

Similar Publications

Enzymes are attractive as catalysts due to their specificity and biocompatibility; however, their use in industrial and biomedical applications is limited by stability. Here, we present a facile approach for enzyme immobilization within "all-enzyme" hydrogels by forming photochemical covalent cross-links between the enzyme glucose oxidase. We demonstrate that the mechanical properties of the enzyme hydrogel can be tuned with enzyme concentration and the data suggests that the dimeric nature of glucose oxidase results in unusual gel formation behavior which suggests a degree of forced induced dimer dissociation and unfolding.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purposeful movement often requires selection of a particular action from a range of alternatives, but how does the brain represent potential actions so that they can be compared for selection, and how are motor commands generated if movement is initiated before the final goal is identified? According to one hypothesis, the brain averages partially prepared motor plans to generate movement when there is goal uncertainty. This is consistent with the idea that motor decision-making unfolds through competition between internal representations of alternative actions. An alternative hypothesis holds that only one movement, which is optimized for task performance, is prepared for execution at any time.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Unlabelled: "Single Model initial-condition Large Ensembles" (SMILEs) conducted with Earth system models have transformed our ability to quantify internal climate variability and forced climate change at local and regional scales. An important consideration in their experimental design is the choice of initialization procedure as this influences the duration of initial-condition memory, with implications for interpreting the temporal evolution of both the ensemble-mean and ensemble-spread. Here we leverage the strategic design of the 100-member Community Earth System Model version 2 (CESM2) SMILE to investigate the dependence of ensemble spread on the method of initialization (micro- vs.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The automated elucidation of the interplay between monoclonal antibody (mAb) structure and function using two-dimensional liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (2D-LC-MS) is reported. Charge variants, induced through forced degradation, are resolved by first-dimension (D) cation-exchange chromatography (CEX) and subsequently collected in loops installed on a multiple heart-cutting valve prior to transfer to second-dimension (D) neonatal crystallizable fragment receptor (FcRn) affinity chromatography coupled with MS. As such, binding affinity of the latter mAb variants can elegantly be assessed and a first glimpse of identity provided.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Tangled Physics: Knots Strain Intuitive Physical Reasoning.

Open Mind (Camb)

September 2024

Department of Psychological & Brain Sciences, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA.

Whereas decades of research have cataloged striking errors in physical reasoning, a resurgence of interest in intuitive physics has revealed humans' remarkable ability to successfully predict the unfolding of physical scenes. A leading interpretation intended to resolve these opposing results is that physical reasoning recruits a general-purpose mechanism that reliably models physical scenarios (explaining recent successes), but overly contrived tasks or impoverished and ecologically invalid stimuli can produce poor performance (accounting for earlier failures). But might there be tasks that persistently strain physical understanding, even in naturalistic contexts? Here, we explore this question by introducing a new intuitive physics task: evaluating the strength of knots and tangles.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!