The stochastic drift-diffusion (DrDiff) theory is an approach used to characterize the dynamical properties of simulation data. With new features in transition times analyses, the framework characterized the thermodynamic free-energy profile [F(Q)], the folding time (τ), and transition path time (τ) by determining the coordinate-dependent drift-velocity [v(Q)] and diffusion [D(Q)] coefficients from trajectory time traces. In order to explore the DrDiff approach and to tune it with two other methods (Bayesian analysis and fep1D algorithm), a numerical integration of the Langevin equation with known D(Q) and F(Q) was performed and the inputted coefficients were recovered with success by the diffusion models. DrDiff was also applied to investigate the prion protein (PrP) kinetics and thermodynamics by analyzing folding/unfolding simulations. The protein structure-based model, the well-known Go¯-model, was employed in a coarse-grained C level to generate long constant-temperature time series. PrP was chosen due to recent experimental single-molecule studies in D and τ that stressed the importance and the difficulty of probing these quantities and the rare transition state events related to prion misfolding and aggregation. The PrP thermodynamic double-well F(Q) profile, the "X" shape of τ(T), and the linear shape of τ(T) were predicted with v(Q) and D(Q) obtained by the DrDiff algorithm. With the advance of single-molecule techniques, the DrDiff framework might be a useful ally for determining kinetic and thermodynamic properties by analyzing time observables of biomolecular systems. The code is freely available at https://github.com/ronaldolab/DrDiff.
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J Phys Chem Lett
February 2020
Laboratório de Biofísica Teórica, Departamento de Física, Instituto de Ciências Exatas, Naturais e Educação , Universidade Federal do Triângulo Mineiro , Uberaba , 38064-200 MG , Brazil.
Two equilibrium force microscopy trajectories [()] of high-precision single-molecule spectroscopy assays were analyzed: the pulling of an HIV RNA hairpin and of a 3-aa sequence of the bacteriorhodopsin membrane protein. Both present hundreds of two-state folding transitions, and their free-energy [()] landscapes were previously obtained by deconvolving time signals with the inverse Boltzmann and methods. In this letter, the two profiles were reconstructed directly from the measured time-series by the drift-diffusion (DrDiff) framework that characterized the effective conformational drift-velocity [()] and diffusion [()] coefficients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chem Phys
September 2019
Laboratório de Biofísica Teórica, Departamento de Física, Instituto de Ciências Exatas, Naturais e Educação, Universidade Federal do Triângulo Mineiro, Uberaba, MG, Brazil.
The stochastic drift-diffusion (DrDiff) theory is an approach used to characterize the dynamical properties of simulation data. With new features in transition times analyses, the framework characterized the thermodynamic free-energy profile [F(Q)], the folding time (τ), and transition path time (τ) by determining the coordinate-dependent drift-velocity [v(Q)] and diffusion [D(Q)] coefficients from trajectory time traces. In order to explore the DrDiff approach and to tune it with two other methods (Bayesian analysis and fep1D algorithm), a numerical integration of the Langevin equation with known D(Q) and F(Q) was performed and the inputted coefficients were recovered with success by the diffusion models.
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