2,850 research outputs found
Secondary Structures in Long Compact Polymers
Compact polymers are self-avoiding random walks which visit every site on a
lattice. This polymer model is used widely for studying statistical problems
inspired by protein folding. One difficulty with using compact polymers to
perform numerical calculations is generating a sufficiently large number of
randomly sampled configurations. We present a Monte-Carlo algorithm which
uniformly samples compact polymer configurations in an efficient manner
allowing investigations of chains much longer than previously studied. Chain
configurations generated by the algorithm are used to compute statistics of
secondary structures in compact polymers. We determine the fraction of monomers
participating in secondary structures, and show that it is self averaging in
the long chain limit and strictly less than one. Comparison with results for
lattice models of open polymer chains shows that compact chains are
significantly more likely to form secondary structure.Comment: 14 pages, 14 figure
Dynamical fluctuations in biochemical reactions and cycles
We develop theory for the dynamics and fluctuations in some cyclic and linear biochemical reactions. We use the approach of maximum caliber, which computes the ensemble of paths taken by the system, given a few experimental observables. This approach may be useful for interpreting single-molecule or few-particle experiments on molecular motors, enzyme reactions, ion-channels, and phosphorylation-driven biological clocks. We consider cycles where all biochemical states are observable. Our method shows how: (1) the noise in cycles increases with cycle size and decreases with the driving force that spins the cycle and (2) provides a recipe for estimating small-number features, such as probability of backward spin in small cycles, from experimental data. The back-spin probability diminishes exponentially with the deviation from equilibrium. We believe this method may also be useful for other few-particle nonequilibrium biochemical reaction systems
Unbiased sampling of globular lattice proteins in three dimensions
We present a Monte Carlo method that allows efficient and unbiased sampling
of Hamiltonian walks on a cubic lattice. Such walks are self-avoiding and visit
each lattice site exactly once. They are often used as simple models of
globular proteins, upon adding suitable local interactions. Our algorithm can
easily be equipped with such interactions, but we study here mainly the
flexible homopolymer case where each conformation is generated with uniform
probability. We argue that the algorithm is ergodic and has dynamical exponent
z=0. We then use it to study polymers of size up to 64^3 = 262144 monomers.
Results are presented for the effective interaction between end points, and the
interaction with the boundaries of the system
Sequence Heterogeneity Accelerates Protein Search for Targets on DNA
The process of protein search for specific binding sites on DNA is
fundamentally important since it marks the beginning of all major biological
processes. We present a theoretical investigation that probes the role of DNA
sequence symmetry, heterogeneity and chemical composition in the protein search
dynamics. Using a discrete-state stochastic approach with a first-passage
events analysis, which takes into account the most relevant physical-chemical
processes, a full analytical description of the search dynamics is obtained. It
is found that, contrary to existing views, the protein search is generally
faster on DNA with more heterogeneous sequences. In addition, the search
dynamics might be affected by the chemical composition near the target site.
The physical origins of these phenomena are discussed. Our results suggest that
biological processes might be effectively regulated by modifying chemical
composition, symmetry and heterogeneity of a genome.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
A lattice model of hydrophobic interactions
Hydrogen bonding is modeled in terms of virtual exchange of protons between
water molecules. A simple lattice model is analyzed, using ideas and techniques
from the theory of correlated electrons in metals. Reasonable parameters
reproduce observed magnitudes and temperature dependence of the hydrophobic
interaction between substitutional impurities and water within this lattice.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures. To appear in Europhysics Letter
Evolution of the potential-energy surface of amorphous silicon
The link between the energy surface of bulk systems and their dynamical
properties is generally difficult to establish. Using the activation-relaxation
technique (ART nouveau), we follow the change in the barrier distribution of a
model of amorphous silicon as a function of the degree of relaxation. We find
that while the barrier-height distribution, calculated from the initial
minimum, is a unique function that depends only on the level of distribution,
the reverse-barrier height distribution, calculated from the final state, is
independent of the relaxation, following a different function. Moreover, the
resulting gained or released energy distribution is a simple convolution of
these two distributions indicating that the activation and relaxation parts of
a the elementary relaxation mechanism are completely independent. This
characterized energy landscape can be used to explain nano-calorimetry
measurements.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Nonuniversal power law scaling in the probability distribution of scientific citations
We develop a model for the distribution of scientific citations. The model
involves a dual mechanism: in the direct mechanism, the author of a new paper
finds an old paper A and cites it. In the indirect mechanism, the author of a
new paper finds an old paper A only via the reference list of a newer
intermediary paper B, which has previously cited A. By comparison to citation
databases, we find that papers having few citations are cited mainly by the
direct mechanism. Papers already having many citations ('classics') are cited
mainly by the indirect mechanism. The indirect mechanism gives a power-law
tail. The 'tipping point' at which a paper becomes a classic is about 21
citations for papers published in the Institute for Scientific Information
(ISI) Web of Science database in 1981, 29 for Physical Review D papers
published from 1975-1994, and 39 for all publications from a list of high
h-index chemists assembled in 2007. The power-law exponent is not universal.
Individuals who are highly cited have a systematically smaller exponent than
individuals who are less cited.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, 2 table
A Bell-Evans-Polanyi principle for molecular dynamics trajectories and its implications for global optimization
The Bell-Evans-Polanyi principle that is valid for a chemical reaction that
proceeds along the reaction coordinate over the transition state is extended to
molecular dynamics trajectories that in general do not cross the dividing
surface between the initial and the final local minima at the exact transition
state. Our molecular dynamics Bell-Evans-Polanyi principle states that low
energy molecular dynamics trajectories are more likely to lead into the basin
of attraction of a low energy local minimum than high energy trajectories. In
the context of global optimization schemes based on molecular dynamics our
molecular dynamics Bell-Evans-Polanyi principle implies that using low energy
trajectories one needs to visit a smaller number of distinguishable local
minima before finding the global minimum than when using high energy
trajectories
Model for Folding and Aggregation in RNA Secondary Structures
We study the statistical mechanics of RNA secondary structures designed to
have an attraction between two different types of structures as a model system
for heteropolymer aggregation. The competition between the branching entropy of
the secondary structure and the energy gained by pairing drives the RNA to
undergo a `temperature independent' second order phase transition from a molten
to an aggregated phase'. The aggregated phase thus obtained has a
macroscopically large number of contacts between different RNAs. The partition
function scaling exponent for this phase is \theta ~ 1/2 and the crossover
exponent of the phase transition is \nu ~ 5/3. The relevance of these
calculations to the aggregation of biological molecules is discussed.Comment: Revtex, 4 pages; 3 Figures; Final published versio
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