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Steering Molecular Dynamics Simulations of Membrane-Associated Proteins with Neutron Reflection Results

Authors :
Bradley W. Treece
Mathias Lösche
Arvind Ramanathan
Frank Heinrich
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2019.

Abstract

We present a novel method to incorporate structural results from surface-sensitive scattering, such as X-ray or neutron reflectometry, into molecular dynamics simulations. While reflectometry techniques generally provide a means to determine the molecular-scale structures of organized interfacial films, they were recently shown to offer the capability to characterize the structures of protein-membrane complexes supported by a solid substrate. One-dimensional information inherent in the experimental results is used in the form of component volume occupancy (CVO) profiles, which describe the distribution of molecular components within an interfacial architecture, to construct real-space constraints in the form of a biasing potential for the simulation that vanishes when the simulated and experimental profiles agree. This approach improves the correspondence between simulation and experiment, as shown in the re-evaluation of an neutron-reflection-derived structure which was approximated by an independent molecular dynamics simulation in earlier work, and it also leads to faster equilibration of ensemble structures. We further show that time averaging the CVO profile that develops in the simulation while biasing with this approach permits fluctuations about the average that are necessary for conformational exploration of the system. This method is particularly valuable for studies of proteins at interfaces that contain disordered regions since the conformation of such regions is difficult to judge from the analysis of one-dimensional experimental profiles and may take prohibitively long to equilibrate in simulations.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1d2f67d7df6638a032caba3be97dfc13
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/823740