Normal modes of crambin and molecular dynamics for structure prediction

Proteins ◽  
1991 ◽  
pp. 220-228 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martha M. Teeter ◽  
Usha Rao ◽  
David Case
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lim Heo ◽  
Collin Arbour ◽  
Michael Feig

Protein structures provide valuable information for understanding biological processes. Protein structures can be determined by experimental methods such as X-ray crystallography, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, or cryogenic electron microscopy. As an alternative, in silico methods can be used to predict protein structures. Those methods utilize protein structure databases for structure prediction via template-based modeling or for training machine-learning models to generate predictions. Structure prediction for proteins distant from proteins with known structures often results in lower accuracy with respect to the true physiological structures. Physics-based protein model refinement methods can be applied to improve model accuracy in the predicted models. Refinement methods rely on conformational sampling around the predicted structures, and if structures closer to the native states are sampled, improvements in the model quality become possible. Molecular dynamics simulations have been especially successful for improving model qualities but although consistent refinement can be achieved, the improvements in model qualities are still moderate. To extend the refinement performance of a simulation-based protocol, we explored new schemes that focus on an optimized use of biasing functions and the application of increased simulation temperatures. In addition, we tested the use of alternative initial models so that the simulations can explore conformational space more broadly. Based on the insight of this analysis we are proposing a new refinement protocol that significantly outperformed previous state-of-the-art molecular dynamics simulation-based protocols in the benchmark tests described here. <br>


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicholas Francia ◽  
Louise S. Price ◽  
Jonas Nyman ◽  
Sarah (Sally) Price ◽  
Matteo Salvalaglio

<p>Crystal structure prediction methods are prone to overestimate the number of potential polymorphs of organic molecules. In this work, we aim to reduce the overprediction by systematically applying molecular dynamics simulations and biased sampling methods to cluster subsets of structures that can easily interconvert at finite temperature and pressure. Following this approach, we rationally reduce the number of predicted putative polymorphs in CSP-generated crystal energy landscapes. This uses an unsupervised clustering approach to analyze independent finite-temperature molecular dynamics trajectories and hence identify a representative structure of each cluster of distinct lattice energy minima that are effectively equivalent at finite temperature and pressure. Biased simulations are used to reduce the impact of limited sampling time and to estimate the work associated with polymorphic transformations. We demonstrate the proposed systematic approach by studying the polymorphs of urea and succinic acid, reducing an initial set of over 100 energetically plausible CSP structures to 12 and 27 respectively, including the experimentally known polymorphs. The simulations also indicate the types of disorder and stacking errors that may occur in real structures.<br></p>


2019 ◽  
Vol 04 (02) ◽  
pp. 1950002 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ivan P. Lobzenko

Properties of discrete breathers are discussed from two points of view: (I) the ab initio modeling in graphene and (II) classical molecular dynamics simulations in the ace-centered cubic (fcc) Ni. In the first (I) approach, the possibility of exciting breathers depends on the strain applied to the graphene sheet. The uniaxial strain leads to opening the gap in the phonon band and, therefore, the existence of breathers with frequencies within the gap. In the second (II) approach, the structure of fcc Ni supports breathers of another kind, which possess a hard nonlinearity type. It is shown that particular high frequency normal mode can be used to construct the breather by means of overlaying a spherically symmetrical function, the maximum of which coincides with the breather core. The approach of breathers excitation based on nonlinear normal modes is independent of the level of approximation. Even though breathers could be obtained both in classical and first-principles calculations, each case has advantages and shortcomings, that are compared in the present work.


1993 ◽  
Vol 330 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ruth Pachter ◽  
Steven B. Fairchild ◽  
James A. Lupo ◽  
Brian S. Sennett ◽  
Robert L. Crane ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTIn our continuing efforts towards the design of nonlinear (NLO) optical chromophore containing polypeptides we present an integrated computational approach, in which the design of biomolecular materials with defined secondary and tertiary structures is investigated by means of novel predictive tools, while the effects of the nonlinear optical chromophores are studied with molecular dynamics simulations. A neural network that was trained to predict the spatial proximity of Cα atoms that are less than a given threshold apart, is applied. The double-iterated Kalman filter (DIKF) technique is then employed with a constraints set that includes these pairwise atomic distances, and the distances and angles that define the structure as it is known from the protein's sequence. The results for test cases, particularly Crambin and genetically engineered Eglin-C, demonstrate that this integrated approach is useful for structure prediction at an intermediate resolution. Defined structural motifs of NLO chromophore containing polypeptides are investigated by using molecular dynamics techniques, particularly for the design of coil coiled amphiphatic biopolymers.


Author(s):  
Asegun S. Henry ◽  
Gang Chen

Silicon's material properties, have been studied extensively because of its technological significance in a variety of industries, including microelectronics. Yet, questions surrounding the phonon relaxation times in silicon continue to linger.1,2 Previous theoretical works3-5 have generated qualitative expressions for phonon relaxation times, however these approaches require fitting parameters that cannot be determined reliably. This paper first discusses implementation issues associated with using the Green-Kubo method in molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. We compare various techniques used in similar works and discusses several implementation issues that have arisen in the literature. We then describe an alternative procedure for analyzing the normal modes of a crystal to extract phonon relaxation times. As an example material we study bulk crystalline silicon using equilibrium MD simulations and lattice dynamics. The environment dependent interatomic potential6 is used to model the interactions and frequency dependent phonon properties are extracted from the MD simulations.


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