18 research outputs found

    Barrier-crossing times for different non-Markovian friction in well and barrier: A numerical study

    Get PDF
    We introduce a generalized Langevin model system for different non-Markovian effects in the well and barrier regions of a potential, and use it to numerically study the barrier-crossing time. In the appropriate limits, our model interpolates between the theoretical barrier-crossing-time predictions by Grote and Hynes (GH), as well as by Pollak et al., which for a single barrier memory time can differ by several orders of magnitude. Our model furthermore allows one to test an analytic rate theory for space-inhomogeneous memory, which disagrees with our numerical results in the long well-memory regime. In this regime, we find that short barrier memory decreases the barrier-crossing time as compared to long barrier memory. This is in contrast with the short well-memory regime, where both our numerical results and the GH theory predict an acceleration of the barrier crossing time with increasing barrier memory time. Both effects, the “Markovian-barrier acceleration” and GH “non-Markovian-barrier acceleration,” can be understood from a committor analysis. Our model combines finite relaxation times of orthogonal degrees of freedom with a space-inhomogeneous coupling to such degrees and represents a step towards more realistic modeling of reaction coordinates

    Pair-Reaction Dynamics in Water: Competition of Memory, Potential Shape, and Inertial Effects

    Get PDF
    When described by a one-dimensional reaction coordinate, pair-reaction rates in a solvent depend, in addition to the potential barrier height and the friction coefficient, on the potential shape, the effective mass, and the friction relaxation spectrum, but a rate theory that accurately accounts for all of these effects does not exist. After a review of classical reaction-rate theories, we show how to extract all parameters of the generalized Langevin equation (GLE) and, in particular, the friction memory function from molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of two prototypical pair reactions in water, the dissociation of NaCl and of two methane molecules. The memory exhibits multiple time scales and, for NaCl, pronounced oscillatory components. Simulations of the GLE by Markovian embedding techniques accurately reproduce the pair-reaction kinetics from MD simulations without any fitting parameters, which confirms the accuracy of the approximative form of the GLE and of the parameter extraction techniques. By modification of the GLE parameters, we investigate the relative importance of memory, mass, and potential shape effects. Neglect of memory slows down NaCl and methane dissociation by roughly a factor of 2; neglect of mass accelerates reactions by a similar factor, and the harmonic approximation of the potential shape gives rise to slight acceleration. This partial error cancellation explains why Kramers’ theory, which neglects memory effects and treats the potential shape in harmonic approximation, describes reaction rates better than more sophisticated theories. In essence, all three effects, friction memory, inertia, and the potential shape nonharmonicity, are important to quantitatively describe pair-reaction kinetics in water

    Collective exchange processes reveal an active site proton cage in bacteriorhodopsin

    Get PDF
    Proton translocation across membranes is vital to all kingdoms of life. Mechanistically, it relies on characteristic proton flows and modifications of hydrogen bonding patterns, termed protonation dynamics, which can be directly observed by fast magic angle spinning (MAS) NMR. Here, we demonstrate that reversible proton displacement in the active site of bacteriorhodopsin already takes place in its equilibrated dark-state, providing new information on the underlying hydrogen exchange processes. In particular, MAS NMR reveals proton exchange at D85 and the retinal Schiff base, suggesting a tautomeric equilibrium and thus partial ionization of D85. We provide evidence for a proton cage and detect a preformed proton path between D85 and the proton shuttle R82. The protons at D96 and D85 exchange with water, in line with ab initio molecular dynamics simulations. We propose that retinal isomerization makes the observed proton exchange processes irreversible and delivers a proton towards the extracellular release site

    Butane dihedral angle dynamics in water is dominated by internal friction

    Get PDF
    The dihedral dynamics of butane in water is known to be rather insensitive to the water viscosity; possible explanations for this involve inertial effects or Kramers’ turnover, the finite memory time of friction, and the presence of so-called internal friction. To disentangle these factors, we introduce a method to directly extract the friction memory function from unconstrained simulations in the presence of an arbitrary free-energy landscape. By analysis of the dihedral friction in butane for varying water viscosity, we demonstrate the existence of an internal friction contribution that does not scale linearly with water viscosity. At normal water viscosity, the internal friction turns out to be eight times larger than the solvent friction and thus completely dominates the effective friction. By comparison with simulations of a constrained butane molecule that has the dihedral as the only degree of freedom, we show that internal friction comes from the six additional degrees of freedom in unconstrained butane that are orthogonal to the dihedral angle reaction coordinate. While the insensitivity of butane’s dihedral dynamics to water viscosity is solely due to the presence of internal friction, inertial effects nevertheless crucially influence the resultant transition rates. In contrast, non-Markovian effects due to the finite memory time are present but do not significantly influence the dihedral barrier-crossing rate of butane. These results not only settle the character of dihedral dynamics in small solvated molecular systems such as butane, they also have important implications for the folding of polymers and proteins

    Force Response of Polypeptide Chains from Water-Explicit MD Simulations

    Get PDF
    Using molecular dynamics simulations in explicit water, the force–extension relations for the five homopeptides polyglycine, polyalanine, polyasparagine, poly(glutamic acid), and polylysine are investigated. From simulations in the low-force regime the Kuhn length is determined, from simulations in the high-force regime the equilibrium contour length and the linear and nonlinear stretching moduli, which agree well with quantum-chemical density-functional theory calculations, are determined. All these parameters vary considerably between the different polypeptides. The augmented inhomogeneous partially freely rotating chain (iPFRC) model, which accounts for side-chain interactions and restricted dihedral rotation, is demonstrated to describe the simulated force–extension relations very well. We present a quantitative comparison between published experimental single-molecule force–extension curves for different polypeptides with simulation and model predictions. The thermodynamic stretching properties of polypeptides are investigated by decomposition of the stretching free energy into energetic and entropic contributions

    Time-Dependent Friction Effects on Vibrational Infrared Frequencies and Line Shapes of Liquid Water

    Get PDF
    From ab initio simulations of liquid water, the time-dependent friction functions and time-averaged nonlinear effective bond potentials for the OH stretch and HOH bend vibrations are extracted. The obtained friction exhibits not only adiabatic contributions at and below the vibrational time scales but also much slower nonadiabatic contributions, reflecting homogeneous and inhomogeneous line broadening mechanisms, respectively. Intermolecular interactions in liquid water soften both stretch and bend potentials compared to the gas phase, which by itself would lead to a red-shift of the corresponding vibrational bands. In contrast, nonadiabatic friction contributions cause a spectral blue shift. For the stretch mode, the potential effect dominates, and thus, a significant red shift when going from gas to the liquid phase results. For the bend mode, potential and nonadiabatic friction effects are of comparable magnitude, so that a slight blue shift results, in agreement with well-known but puzzling experimental findings. The observed line broadening is shown to be roughly equally caused by adiabatic and nonadiabatic friction contributions for both the stretch and bend modes in liquid water. Thus, the quantitative analysis of the time-dependent friction that acts on vibrational modes in liquids advances the understanding of infrared vibrational frequencies and line shapes

    Spectral signatures of excess-proton waiting and transfer-path dynamics in aqueous hydrochloric acid solutions

    Get PDF
    Signatures of solvated excess protons in infrared difference absorption spectra, such as the continuum band between the water bend and stretch bands, have been experimentally known for a long time, but the theoretical basis for linking spectral signatures with the microscopic proton-transfer mechanism so far relied on normal-mode analysis. We analyze the excess-proton dynamics in ab initio molecular-dynamics simulations of aqueous hydrochloric acid solutions by trajectory-decomposition techniques. The continuum band in the 2000 - 3000 cm1^{-1 } range is shown to be due to normal-mode oscillations of temporary H3_3O+^+ complexes. An additional prominent peak at 400 cm1^{-1} reports on the coupling of excess-proton motion to the relative vibrations of the two flanking water molecules. The actual proton transfer between two water molecules, which for large water separations involves crossing of a barrier and thus is not a normal mode, is characterized by two characteristic time scales: Firstly, the waiting time for transfer to occur in the range of 200 - 300 fs, which leads to a broad weak shoulder around ~100 cm1^{-1}, consistent with our experimental THz spectra. Secondly, the mean duration of a transfer event of about 14 fs, which produces a rather well-defined spectral contribution around 1200 cm1^{-1} and agrees in location and width with previous experimental mid-infrared spectra

    Proton-transfer spectroscopy beyond the normal-mode scenario

    Get PDF
    A stochastic theory is developed to predict the spectral signature of proton-transfer processes and is applied to infrared spectra computed from ab initio molecular-dynamics simulations of a single H5O2+ cation. By constraining the oxygen atoms to a fixed distance, this system serves as a tunable model for general proton-transfer processes with variable barrier height. Three spectral contributions at distinct frequencies are identified and analytically predicted: the quasi-harmonic motion around the most probable configuration, amenable to normal-mode analysis, the contribution due to transfer paths when the proton moves over the barrier, and a shoulder for low frequencies stemming from the stochastic transfer-waiting-time distribution; the latter two contributions are not captured by normal-mode analysis but exclusively reported on the proton-transfer kinetics. In accordance with reaction rate theory, the transfer-waiting-contribution frequency depends inversely exponentially on the barrier height, whereas the transfer-path-contribution frequency is rather insensitive to the barrier height

    Non-Markovian modeling of protein folding.

    Get PDF
    We extract the folding free energy landscape and the time-dependent friction function, the two ingredients of the generalized Langevin equation (GLE), from explicit-water molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of the α-helix forming polypeptide [Formula: see text] for a one-dimensional reaction coordinate based on the sum of the native H-bond distances. Folding and unfolding times from numerical integration of the GLE agree accurately with MD results, which demonstrate the robustness of our GLE-based non-Markovian model. In contrast, Markovian models do not accurately describe the peptide kinetics and in particular, cannot reproduce the folding and unfolding kinetics simultaneously, even if a spatially dependent friction profile is used. Analysis of the GLE demonstrates that memory effects in the friction significantly speed up peptide folding and unfolding kinetics, as predicted by the Grote-Hynes theory, and are the cause of anomalous diffusion in configuration space. Our methods are applicable to any reaction coordinate and in principle, also to experimental trajectories from single-molecule experiments. Our results demonstrate that a consistent description of protein-folding dynamics must account for memory friction effects
    corecore