scholarly journals Insights into the Binding Mechanism of Ascorbic Acid and Violaxanthin with Violaxanthin De-Epoxidase (VDE) and Chlorophycean Violaxanthin De-Epoxidase (CVDE) Enzymes: Docking, Molecular Dynamics, and Free Energy Analysis

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Satyaranjan Biswal ◽  
Parth Sarthi Sen Gupta ◽  
Haamid Rasool Bhat ◽  
Malay Kumar Rana

AbstractPhotosynthetic organisms have evolved to work under low and high lights in photoprotection, acting as a scavenger of reactive oxygen species. The light dependent xanthophyll cycle involved in this process is performed by a key enzyme (present in the thylakoid lumen) Violaxanthin De-Epoxidase (VDE) in the presence of violaxanthin and ascorbic acid substrates. Phylogenetically, VDE is found to be connected with an ancestral enzyme Chlorophycean Violaxanthin De-Epoxidase (CVDE) present in the green algae on the stromal side of the thylakoid membrane. However, the structure and functions of CVDE were not known. In search of functional similarities involving this cycle, the structure, binding conformation, stability, and interaction mechanism of CVDE are explored with the two substrates in comparison to VDE. The structure of CVDE was determined by homology modeling and validated. In-silico docking (of first-principles-optimized substrates) revealed it has a larger catalytic domain than VDE. A thorough analysis of the binding affinity and stability of four enzyme-substrate complexes are performed by computing free energies and its decomposition, the root-mean-square deviation (RMSD) and fluctuation (RMSF), the radius of gyration, salt-bridge and hydrogen bonding interactions in molecular dynamics. Based on these, violaxanthin interacts with CVDE to the similar extent as that of VDE, hence its role is expected to be the same for both the enzymes. On the contrary, ascorbic acid has a weaker interaction with CVDE than VDE. As these interactions drive epoxidation or de-epoxidation process in the xanthophyll cycle, it immediately discerns that either ascorbic acid does not take part in de-epoxidation or this process requires a different cofactor because of the weaker interaction of ascorbic acid with CVDE in comparison to VDE.

Micromachines ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (10) ◽  
pp. 636 ◽  
Author(s):  
Can Weng ◽  
Dongjiao Yang ◽  
Mingyong Zhou

Injection molding is one of the most potential techniques for fabricating polymeric products in large numbers. The filling process, but also the demolding process, influence the quality of injection-molded nanostructures. In this study, nano-cavities with different depth-to-width ratios (D/W) were built and molecular dynamics simulations on the demolding process were conducted. Conformation change and density distribution were analyzed. Interfacial adhesion was utilized to investigate the interaction mechanism between polypropylene (PP) and nickel mold insert. The results show that the separation would first happen at the shoulder of the nanostructures. Nanostructures and the whole PP layer are both stretched, resulting in a sharp decrease in average density after demolding. The largest increase in the radius of gyration and lowest velocity can be observed in 3:1 nanostructure during the separation. Deformation on nanostructure occurs, but nevertheless the whole structure is still in good shape. The adhesion energy gets higher with the increase of D/W. The demolding force increases quickly to the peak point and then gradually decreases to zero. The majority of the force comes from the adhesion and friction on the nanostructure due to the interfacial interaction.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
James Sterling ◽  
Wenjuan Jiang ◽  
Wesley M. Botello-Smith ◽  
Yun L. Luo

Molecular dynamics simulations of hyaluronic acid and heparin brushes are presented that show important effects of ion-pairing, water dielectric decrease, and co-ion exclusion. Results show equilibria with electroneutrality attained through screening and pairing of brush anionic charges by cations. Most surprising is the reversal of the Donnan potential that would be expected based on electrostatic Boltzmann partitioning alone. Water dielectric decrement within the brush domain is also associated with Born hydration-driven cation exclusion from the brush. We observe that the primary partition energy attracting cations to attain brush electroneutrality is the ion-pairing or salt-bridge energy associated with cation-sulfate and cation-carboxylate solvent-separated and contact ion pairs. Potassium and sodium pairing to glycosaminoglycan carboxylates and sulfates consistently show similar abundance of contact-pairing and solvent-separated pairing. In these crowded macromolecular brushes, ion-pairing, Born-hydration, and electrostatic potential energies all contribute to attain electroneutrality and should therefore contribute in mean-field models to accurately represent brush electrostatics.


2004 ◽  
Vol 18 (15) ◽  
pp. 2123-2139 ◽  
Author(s):  
BIN XUE ◽  
JUN WANG ◽  
WEI WANG

We study the "folding" behaviors of homopolymers with one end fixed. By using canonical ensemble molecular dynamics simulation method, we observe the conformational changes during folding processes. Long chains collapse to the helical nuclei, then regroup to helix from the free-end to form the compact conformations through the middle stages of helix-like coil and helix-like cone, while short chains do not apparently have the above mentioned middle stages. Through simulated annealing, the native conformation of homopolymer chain in our model is found to be helix. We show the relations between specific heat C v (T) and radius of gyration R g (T) as functions of temperature, chain length and the interaction strength, respectively. We find that these two quantities match well and can be combined to interpret the "folding" process of the homopolymer. It is found that the collapse temperature Tθ and the native-like folding temperature T f do not change with the chain length in our model, however the interaction strength affects the values of Tθ and T f .


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhiye Tang ◽  
Susumu Okazaki

Glass transition is an important phenomenon of polymer materials and it has been intensively studied over the past a few decades. However, the influencing factors arising from the chemical structures of the polymers are often ignored due to a continuous or coarse-grained description of the polymer. Here, we approached this phenomenon using all-atomistic molecular dynamics (MD) simulations and two conventionally used polymer materials, polycarbonate (PC) and poly-(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA). We reproduced the glass transition temperatures (Tg) of the two materials reasonably well. Then we characterized and investigated the glass transition process by looking at the changes of potential energy, dihedral transition, and thermal fluctuation of the individual degrees of freedom in the systems, over the entire temperature range of glass transition. As previously reported, the dihedral angles stop their conformational changes gradually at the Tg, especially for the main chain dihedrals, and sidechain rotations immediately rooting from the main chain. The volumetric change during the temperature decrease is confirmed to be because of conformational adjustment, probably due to the tendency of chain stretching for the maintenance of the radius of gyration, and the loss of thermal energy. The strength of motions of single degrees of freedom and polymer chains, and overall slow motions obtained by normal mode analysis (NMA) shows that different motions at different spatial scale may gradually stop at distinct temperature in the MD simulation temporal and spatial scales. Presumably, the small spatial scale do not contribute to the glass transition at the experimental scale since the timescale is much longer than their relaxation time.


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