Publication | Open Access
A Nonradial Coarse-Grained Potential for Proteins Produces Naturally Stable Secondary Structure Elements
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Citations
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References
2009
Year
EngineeringProtein AssemblyMolecular BiologyProtein Phase SeparationAnalytical UltracentrifugationMolecular DynamicsNonradial Coarse-grained PotentialProtein FoldingProtein X-ray CrystallographyMolecular SimulationComputational BiochemistryPriori Bias PotentialsMacromolecular AssembliesBiophysicsProtein ChemistryProtein ModelingProtein Structure PredictionMolecular ModelingCrystallographyStructural BiologyBiophysical AspectNonradial Potential TermNatural SciencesBackbone Dipole-dipole InteractionsMolecular BiophysicsComputational Biophysics
We introduce a nonradial potential term for coarse-grained (CG) molecular simulations of proteins. This term mimics the backbone dipole-dipole interactions and accounts for the needed directionality to form stable folded secondary structure elements. We show that α-helical and β-sheet peptide chains are correctly described in dynamics without the need of introducing any a priori bias potentials or ad hoc parametrizations, which limit broader applicability of CG simulations for proteins. Moreover, our model is able to catch the formation of supersecondary structural motifs, like transitions from long single α-helices to helix-coil-helix or β-hairpin assemblies. This novel scheme requires the structural information of Cα beads only; it does not introduce any additional degrees of freedom to the system and has a general formulation, which allows it to be used in synergy with various CG protocols, leading to an improved description of the structural and dynamic properties of protein assemblies and networks.
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