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Replica Exchange Molecular Dynamics of Diphenylalanine Amyloid Peptides in Electric Fields

[Image: see text] The self-assembling propensity of amyloid peptides such as diphenylalanine (FF) allows them to form ordered, nanoscale structures, with biocompatible properties important for biomedical applications. Moreover, piezoelectric properties allow FF molecules and their aggregates (e.g.,...

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Autores principales: Narayan, Brajesh, Herbert, Colm, Rodriguez, Brian J., Brooks, Bernard R., Buchete, Nicolae-Viorel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2021
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8279545/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33990140
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.1c01939
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author Narayan, Brajesh
Herbert, Colm
Rodriguez, Brian J.
Brooks, Bernard R.
Buchete, Nicolae-Viorel
author_facet Narayan, Brajesh
Herbert, Colm
Rodriguez, Brian J.
Brooks, Bernard R.
Buchete, Nicolae-Viorel
author_sort Narayan, Brajesh
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] The self-assembling propensity of amyloid peptides such as diphenylalanine (FF) allows them to form ordered, nanoscale structures, with biocompatible properties important for biomedical applications. Moreover, piezoelectric properties allow FF molecules and their aggregates (e.g., FF nanotubes) to be aligned in a controlled way by the application of external electric fields. However, while the behavior of FF nanostructures emerges from the biophysical properties of the monomers, the detailed responses of individual peptides to both temperature and electric fields are not fully understood. Here, we study the temperature-dependent conformational dynamics of FF peptides solvated in explicit water molecules, an environment relevant to biomedical applications, by using an enhanced sampling method, replica exchange molecular dynamics (REMD), in conjunction with applied electric fields. Our simulations highlight and overcome possible artifacts that may occur during the setup of REMD simulations of explicitly solvated peptides in the presence of external electric fields, a problem particularly important in the case of short peptides such as FF. The presence of the external fields could overstabilize certain conformational states in one or more REMD replicas, leading to distortions of the underlying potential energy distributions observed at each temperature. This can be overcome by correcting the REMD initial conditions to include the lower-energy conformations induced by the external field. We show that the converged REMD data can be analyzed using a Markovian description of conformational states and show that a rather complex, 3-state, temperature-dependent conformational dynamics in the absence of electric fields collapses to only one of these states in the presence of the electric fields. These details on the temperature- and electric-field-dependent thermodynamic and kinetic properties of small FF amyloid peptides can be useful in understanding and devising new methods to control their aggregation-prone biophysical properties and, possibly, the structural and biophysical properties of FF molecular nanostructures.
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spelling pubmed-82795452021-07-15 Replica Exchange Molecular Dynamics of Diphenylalanine Amyloid Peptides in Electric Fields Narayan, Brajesh Herbert, Colm Rodriguez, Brian J. Brooks, Bernard R. Buchete, Nicolae-Viorel J Phys Chem B [Image: see text] The self-assembling propensity of amyloid peptides such as diphenylalanine (FF) allows them to form ordered, nanoscale structures, with biocompatible properties important for biomedical applications. Moreover, piezoelectric properties allow FF molecules and their aggregates (e.g., FF nanotubes) to be aligned in a controlled way by the application of external electric fields. However, while the behavior of FF nanostructures emerges from the biophysical properties of the monomers, the detailed responses of individual peptides to both temperature and electric fields are not fully understood. Here, we study the temperature-dependent conformational dynamics of FF peptides solvated in explicit water molecules, an environment relevant to biomedical applications, by using an enhanced sampling method, replica exchange molecular dynamics (REMD), in conjunction with applied electric fields. Our simulations highlight and overcome possible artifacts that may occur during the setup of REMD simulations of explicitly solvated peptides in the presence of external electric fields, a problem particularly important in the case of short peptides such as FF. The presence of the external fields could overstabilize certain conformational states in one or more REMD replicas, leading to distortions of the underlying potential energy distributions observed at each temperature. This can be overcome by correcting the REMD initial conditions to include the lower-energy conformations induced by the external field. We show that the converged REMD data can be analyzed using a Markovian description of conformational states and show that a rather complex, 3-state, temperature-dependent conformational dynamics in the absence of electric fields collapses to only one of these states in the presence of the electric fields. These details on the temperature- and electric-field-dependent thermodynamic and kinetic properties of small FF amyloid peptides can be useful in understanding and devising new methods to control their aggregation-prone biophysical properties and, possibly, the structural and biophysical properties of FF molecular nanostructures. American Chemical Society 2021-05-14 2021-05-27 /pmc/articles/PMC8279545/ /pubmed/33990140 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.1c01939 Text en © 2021 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society Permits the broadest form of re-use including for commercial purposes, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Narayan, Brajesh
Herbert, Colm
Rodriguez, Brian J.
Brooks, Bernard R.
Buchete, Nicolae-Viorel
Replica Exchange Molecular Dynamics of Diphenylalanine Amyloid Peptides in Electric Fields
title Replica Exchange Molecular Dynamics of Diphenylalanine Amyloid Peptides in Electric Fields
title_full Replica Exchange Molecular Dynamics of Diphenylalanine Amyloid Peptides in Electric Fields
title_fullStr Replica Exchange Molecular Dynamics of Diphenylalanine Amyloid Peptides in Electric Fields
title_full_unstemmed Replica Exchange Molecular Dynamics of Diphenylalanine Amyloid Peptides in Electric Fields
title_short Replica Exchange Molecular Dynamics of Diphenylalanine Amyloid Peptides in Electric Fields
title_sort replica exchange molecular dynamics of diphenylalanine amyloid peptides in electric fields
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8279545/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33990140
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.1c01939
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