scholarly journals Thermodynamics of adaptive molecular resolution

Author(s):  
R. Delgado-Buscalioni

A relatively general thermodynamic formalism for adaptive molecular resolution (AMR) is presented. The description is based on the approximation of local thermodynamic equilibrium and considers the alchemic parameter λ as the conjugate variable of the potential energy difference between the atomistic and coarse-grained model Φ = U (1) − U (0) . The thermodynamic formalism recovers the relations obtained from statistical mechanics of H-AdResS (Español et al ., J. Chem. Phys. 142 , 064115, 2015 ( doi:10.1063/1.4907006 )) and provides relations between the free energy compensation and thermodynamic potentials. Inspired by this thermodynamic analogy, several generalizations of AMR are proposed, such as the exploration of new Maxwell relations and how to treat λ and Φ as ‘real’ thermodynamic variables . This article is part of the themed issue ‘Multiscale modelling at the physics–chemistry–biology interface’.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zakarya Benayad ◽  
Sören von Bülow ◽  
Lukas S. Stelzl ◽  
Gerhard Hummer

AbstractDisordered proteins and nucleic acids can condense into droplets that resemble the membraneless organelles observed in living cells. MD simulations offer a unique tool to characterize the molecular interactions governing the formation of these biomolecular condensates, their physico-chemical properties, and the factors controlling their composition and size. However, biopolymer condensation depends sensitively on the balance between different energetic and entropic contributions. Here, we develop a general strategy to fine-tune the potential energy function for molecular dynamics simulations of biopolymer phase separation. We rebalance protein-protein interactions against solvation and entropic contributions to match the excess free energy of transferring proteins between dilute solution and condensate. We illustrate this formalism by simulating liquid droplet formation of the FUS low complexity domain (LCD) with a rebalanced MARTINI model. By scaling the strength of the nonbonded interactions in the coarse-grained MARTINI potential energy function, we map out a phase diagram in the plane of protein concentration and interaction strength. Above a critical scaling factor of αc ≈ 0.6, FUS LCD condensation is observed, where α = 1 and 0 correspond to full and repulsive interactions in the MARTINI model, respectively. For a scaling factor α = 0.65, we recover the experimental densities of the dilute and dense phases, and thus the excess protein transfer free energy into the droplet and the saturation concentration where FUS LCD condenses. In the region of phase separation, we simulate FUS LCD droplets of four different sizes in stable equilibrium with the dilute phase and slabs of condensed FUS LCD for tens of microseconds, and over one millisecond in aggregate. We determine surface tensions in the range of 0.01 to 0.4mN/m from the fluctuations of the droplet shape and from the capillary-wave-like broadening of the interface between the two phases. From the dynamics of the protein end-to-end distance, we estimate shear viscosities from 0.001 to 0.02Pas for the FUS LCD droplets with scaling factors α in the range of 0.625 to 0.75, where we observe liquid droplets. Significant hydration of the interior of the droplets keeps the proteins mobile and the droplets fluid.


Author(s):  
David J. Wales

The potential energy surface (PES) underlies most calculations of structure, dynamics and thermodynamics in molecular science. In this contribution connections between the topology of the PES and observable properties are developed for a coarse–grained model of virus capsid self–assembly. The model predicts that a thermodynamically stable, kinetically accessible icosahedral shell exists for pentameric building blocks of the right shape: not too flat and not too spiky. The structure of the corresponding PES is probably common to other systems where directed searches avoid Levinthal's paradox, such as ‘magic number’ clusters, protein folding and crystallization.


2021 ◽  
Vol 154 (7) ◽  
pp. 079901
Author(s):  
José Ruiz-Franco ◽  
Diego Jaramillo-Cano ◽  
Manuel Camargo ◽  
Christos N. Likos ◽  
Emanuela Zaccarelli

2009 ◽  
Vol 20 (05) ◽  
pp. 747-759
Author(s):  
JUAN G. DIAZ OCHOA

This work introduces a novel coarse-grained model representing the dynamics of polar molecules that adsorb on a substrate in the presence of a solvent. The motivation of the model is to avoid the explicit representation of the solvent. Instead, the solvent-mediated interaction is indirectly represented using a fluctuating energy landscape. The dynamics, on which this model is based, are similar to the dynamics in game theory. In particular, the strategy of an agent in a game is similar to the modification of the free energy barrier between the molecule and the substrate induced by other companion molecules. The aim of this method is to show how the interplay between solvents and companion molecules can imply a modification in the adsorption energy of molecules, and how this modification can buffer the adsorption of specific molecules on surfaces. The results, and their implications in the molecular recognition of surfaces, are discussed.


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