189 research outputs found
Water is not a Dynamic Polydisperse Branched Polymer
The contributed paper by Naserifar and Goddard reports that their RexPoN
water model under ambient conditions simulates liquid water as a dynamic
polydisperse branched polymer, which they speculate explains the existence of
the liquid-liquid critical point (LLCP) in the supercooled region. Our work
addresses several serious factual errors and needless speculation in their
paper about their interpretation of their model and its implication for the
LLCP in supercooled water.Comment: Lette
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Computer simulations explain mutation-induced effects on the DNA editing by adenine base editors.
Adenine base editors, which were developed by engineering a transfer RNA adenosine deaminase enzyme (TadA) into a DNA editing enzyme (TadA*), enable precise modification of A:T to G⋮C base pairs. Here, we use molecular dynamics simulations to uncover the structural and functional roles played by the initial mutations in the onset of the DNA editing activity by TadA*. Atomistic insights reveal that early mutations lead to intricate conformational changes in the structure of TadA*. In particular, the first mutation, Asp108Asn, induces an enhancement in the binding affinity of TadA to DNA. In silico and in vivo reversion analyses verify the importance of this single mutation in imparting functional promiscuity to TadA* and demonstrate that TadA* performs DNA base editing as a monomer rather than a dimer
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Hydrogen bonding structure of confined water templated by a metal-organic framework with open metal sites.
Water in confinement exhibits properties significantly different from bulk water due to frustration in the hydrogen-bond network induced by interactions with the substrate. Here, we combine infrared spectroscopy and many-body molecular dynamics simulations to probe the structure and dynamics of confined water as a function of relative humidity within a metal-organic framework containing cylindrical pores lined with ordered cobalt open coordination sites. Building upon the agreement between experimental and theoretical spectra, we demonstrate that water at low relative humidity binds initially to open metal sites and subsequently forms disconnected one-dimensional chains of hydrogen-bonded water molecules bridging between cobalt atoms. With increasing relative humidity, these water chains nucleate pore filling, and water molecules occupy the entire pore interior before the relative humidity reaches 30%. Systematic analysis of rotational and translational dynamics indicates heterogeneity in this pore-confined water, with water molecules displaying variable mobility as a function of distance from the interface
Quantitative assessment of the accuracy of centroid molecular dynamics for the calculation of the infrared spectrum of liquid water
Journal ArticleA detailed analysis of the infrared lineshapes corresponding to the intramolecular bond vibrations of HOD in either H2O or D2O is presented here in order to quantitatively assess the accuracy of centroid molecular dynamics in reproducing the correct features of the infrared spectrum of water at ambient conditions. Through a direct comparison with the results obtained from mixed quantum-classical calculations, it is shown that centroid molecular dynamics provides accurate vibrational shifts and lineshapes when the intramolecular bond stretching vibrations are described by a physically reasonable anharmonic potential. Artificially large redshifts due to a so-called "curvature problem" are instead obtained with an unphysical shifted harmonic potential because the latter allows substantial probability density at zero bond lengths
Electron affinity of liquid water.
Understanding redox and photochemical reactions in aqueous environments requires a precise knowledge of the ionization potential and electron affinity of liquid water. The former has been measured, but not the latter. We predict the electron affinity of liquid water and of its surface from first principles, coupling path-integral molecular dynamics with ab initio potentials, and many-body perturbation theory. Our results for the surface (0.8 eV) agree well with recent pump-probe spectroscopy measurements on amorphous ice. Those for the bulk (0.1-0.3 eV) differ from several estimates adopted in the literature, which we critically revisit. We show that the ionization potential of the bulk and surface are almost identical; instead their electron affinities differ substantially, with the conduction band edge of the surface much deeper in energy than that of the bulk. We also discuss the significant impact of nuclear quantum effects on the fundamental gap and band edges of the liquid
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