scholarly journals Free energy of ionic hydration: Analysis of a thermodynamic integration technique to evaluate free energy differences by molecular dynamics simulations

1988 ◽  
Vol 89 (9) ◽  
pp. 5876-5886 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. P. Straatsma ◽  
H. J. C. Berendsen
Author(s):  
Balaji Selvam ◽  
Ya-Chi Yu ◽  
Liqing Chen ◽  
Diwakar Shukla

<p>The SWEET family belongs to a class of transporters in plants that undergoes large conformational changes to facilitate transport of sugar molecules across the cell membrane. However, the structures of their functionally relevant conformational states in the transport cycle have not been reported. In this study, we have characterized the conformational dynamics and complete transport cycle of glucose in OsSWEET2b transporter using extensive molecular dynamics simulations. Using Markov state models, we estimated the free energy barrier associated with different states as well as 1 for the glucose the transport mechanism. SWEETs undergoes structural transition to outward-facing (OF), Occluded (OC) and inward-facing (IF) and strongly support alternate access transport mechanism. The glucose diffuses freely from outside to inside the cell without causing major conformational changes which means that the conformations of glucose unbound and bound snapshots are exactly same for OF, OC and IF states. We identified a network of hydrophobic core residues at the center of the transporter that restricts the glucose entry to the cytoplasmic side and act as an intracellular hydrophobic gate. The mechanistic predictions from molecular dynamics simulations are validated using site-directed mutagenesis experiments. Our simulation also revealed hourglass like intermediate states making the pore radius narrower at the center. This work provides new fundamental insights into how substrate-transporter interactions actively change the free energy landscape of the transport cycle to facilitate enhanced transport activity.</p>


2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Miraslau L. Barabash ◽  
William A. T. Gibby ◽  
Carlo Guardiani ◽  
Alex Smolyanitsky ◽  
Dmitry G. Luchinsky ◽  
...  

AbstractIn order to permeate a nanopore, an ion must overcome a dehydration energy barrier caused by the redistribution of surrounding water molecules. The redistribution is inhomogeneous, anisotropic and strongly position-dependent, resulting in complex patterns that are routinely observed in molecular dynamics simulations. Here, we study the physical origin of these patterns and of how they can be predicted and controlled. We introduce an analytic model able to predict the patterns in a graphene nanopore in terms of experimentally accessible radial distribution functions, giving results that agree well with molecular dynamics simulations. The patterns are attributable to a complex interplay of ionic hydration shells with water layers adjacent to the graphene membrane and with the hydration cloud of the nanopore rim atoms, and we discuss ways of controlling them. Our findings pave the way to designing required transport properties into nanoionic devices by optimising the structure of the hydration patterns.


2017 ◽  
Vol 114 (42) ◽  
pp. E8830-E8836 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chang Yun Son ◽  
Arun Yethiraj ◽  
Qiang Cui

Cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) is a transmembrane protein that uses the free energy of O2 reduction to generate the proton concentration gradient across the membrane. The regulation of competitive proton transfer pathways has been established to be essential to the vectorial transport efficiency of CcO, yet the underlying mechanism at the molecular level remains lacking. Recent studies have highlighted the potential importance of hydration-level change in an internal cavity that connects the proton entrance channel, the site of O2 reduction, and the putative proton exit route. In this work, we use atomistic molecular dynamics simulations to investigate the energetics and timescales associated with the volume fluctuation and hydration-level change in this central cavity. Extensive unrestrained molecular dynamics simulations (accumulatively ∼4 μs) and free energy computations for different chemical states of CcO support a model in which the volume and hydration level of the cavity are regulated by the protonation state of a propionate group of heme a3 and, to a lesser degree, the redox state of heme a and protonation state of Glu286. Markov-state model analysis of ∼2-μs trajectories suggests that hydration-level change occurs on the timescale of 100–200 ns before the proton-loading site is protonated. The computed energetic and kinetic features for the cavity wetting transition suggest that reversible hydration-level change of the cavity can indeed be a key factor that regulates the branching of proton transfer events and therefore contributes to the vectorial efficiency of proton transport.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document