185 research outputs found

    Enhanced Lipid Diffusion and Mixing in Accelerated Molecular Dynamics

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    Accelerated molecular dynamics (aMD) is an enhanced sampling technique that expedites conformational space sampling by reducing the barriers separating various low-energy states of a system. Here, we present the first application of the aMD method on lipid membranes. Altogether, ∼1.5 μs simulations were performed on three systems: a pure POPC bilayer, a pure DMPC bilayer, and a mixed POPC:DMPC bilayer. Overall, the aMD simulations are found to produce significant speedup in trans–gauche isomerization and lipid lateral diffusion versus those in conventional MD (cMD) simulations. Further comparison of a 70-ns aMD run and a 300-ns cMD run of the mixed POPC:DMPC bilayer shows that the two simulations yield similar lipid mixing behaviors, with aMD generating a 2–3-fold speedup compared to cMD. Our results demonstrate that the aMD method is an efficient approach for the study of bilayer structural and dynamic properties. On the basis of simulations of the three bilayer systems, we also discuss the impact of aMD parameters on various lipid properties, which can be used as a guideline for future aMD simulations of membrane systems

    Identifying human diamine sensors for death related putrescine and cadaverine molecules

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    Pungent chemical compounds originating from decaying tissue are strong drivers of animal behavior. Two of the best-characterized death smell components are putrescine (PUT) and cadaverine (CAD), foul-smelling molecules produced by decarboxylation of amino acids during decomposition. These volatile polyamines act as 'necromones', triggering avoidance or attractive responses, which are fundamental for the survival of a wide range of species. The few studies that have attempted to identify the cognate receptors for these molecules have suggested the involvement of the seven-helix trace amine-associated receptors (TAARs), localized in the olfactory epithelium. However, very little is known about the precise chemosensory receptors that sense these compounds in the majority of organisms and the molecular basis of their interactions. In this work, we have used computational strategies to characterize the binding between PUT and CAD with the TAAR6 and TAAR8 human receptors. Sequence analysis, homology modeling, docking and molecular dynamics studies suggest a tandem of negatively charged aspartates in the binding pocket of these receptors which are likely to be involved in the recognition of these small biogenic diamines

    Viability Conditions for a Compartmentalized Protometabolic System: A Semi-Empirical Approach

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    In this work we attempt to find out the extent to which realistic prebiotic compartments, such as fatty acid vesicles, would constrain the chemical network dynamics that could have sustained a minimal form of metabolism. We combine experimental and simulation results to establish the conditions under which a reaction network with a catalytically closed organization (more specifically, an ()-system) would overcome the potential problem of self-suffocation that arises from the limited accessibility of nutrients to its internal reaction domain. The relationship between the permeability of the membrane, the lifetime of the key catalysts and their efficiency (reaction rate enhancement) turns out to be critical. In particular, we show how permeability values constrain the characteristic time scale of the bounded protometabolic processes. From this concrete and illustrative example we finally extend the discussion to a wider evolutionary context

    Cholesterol catalyses Aβ42 aggregation through a heterogeneous nucleation pathway in the presence of lipid membranes.

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    Alzheimer's disease is a neurodegenerative disorder associated with the aberrant aggregation of the amyloid-β peptide. Although increasing evidence implicates cholesterol in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease, the detailed mechanistic link between this lipid molecule and the disease process remains to be fully established. To address this problem, we adopt a kinetics-based strategy that reveals a specific catalytic role of cholesterol in the aggregation of Aβ42 (the 42-residue form of the amyloid-β peptide). More specifically, we demonstrate that lipid membranes containing cholesterol promote Aβ42 aggregation by enhancing its primary nucleation rate by up to 20-fold through a heterogeneous nucleation pathway. We further show that this process occurs as a result of cooperativity in the interaction of multiple cholesterol molecules with Aβ42. These results identify a specific microscopic pathway by which cholesterol dramatically enhances the onset of Aβ42 aggregation, thereby helping rationalize the link between Alzheimer's disease and the impairment of cholesterol homeostasis

    The multiple faces of self-assembled lipidic systems

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    Lipids, the building blocks of cells, common to every living organisms, have the propensity to self-assemble into well-defined structures over short and long-range spatial scales. The driving forces have their roots mainly in the hydrophobic effect and electrostatic interactions. Membranes in lamellar phase are ubiquitous in cellular compartments and can phase-separate upon mixing lipids in different liquid-crystalline states. Hexagonal phases and especially cubic phases can be synthesized and observed in vivo as well. Membrane often closes up into a vesicle whose shape is determined by the interplay of curvature, area difference elasticity and line tension energies, and can adopt the form of a sphere, a tube, a prolate, a starfish and many more. Complexes made of lipids and polyelectrolytes or inorganic materials exhibit a rich diversity of structural morphologies due to additional interactions which become increasingly hard to track without the aid of suitable computer models. From the plasma membrane of archaebacteria to gene delivery, self-assembled lipidic systems have left their mark in cell biology and nanobiotechnology; however, the underlying physics is yet to be fully unraveled

    Small-angle neutron scattering study of N-dodecyl-N,N-dimethylamine N-oxide induced solubilization of dioleoylphosphatidylcholine bilayers in liposomes

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    Mixtures of N-dodecyl-N,N-dimethylamine N-oxide (DDAO) and 1,2-dioleoylphosphatidyl choline (DOPC) in chloroform/methanol were evaporated, dried and hydrated in excess (H2O)-H-2. Aqueous dispersions thus prepared were extruded through polycarbonate filter with pores of diameter 500 Angstrom. These samples were studied using small-angle neutron scattering. DDAO destabilizes the bilayer in unilamellar liposomes and solubilizes it into mixed micelles whose shape changes with the DDAO : DOPC molar ratio. Bilayers or/and bilayer fragments have been observed up to DDAO : DOPC = 1.5, rod-like particles (tubular, cylindric micelles) at 2.5 4. In bilayers or/and bilayer fragments, DDAO modulates the thickness of the bilayer

    Effect of alkan 1 ols on the structure of dopc model membrane

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    Abstract The effect of general anaesthetics alkan-1-ols (CnOH, where n = 10, 12, 14, 16 and 18 is the number of carbon atoms in the molecule) on the structure of dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC) model membrane was studied by small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) and small-angle neutron diffraction (SAND). Fluid bilayers were prepared at CnOH:DOPC = 0.3 molar ratio. The results of both the experiments show that bilayer thickness - a thickness parameter dg in the case of SANS and lamellar repeat distance D in the case of SAND - increases with increasing n. A coexistence of two lamellar phases with different D was detected by measuring the C18OH+DOPC oriented sample.</jats:p

    What Determines the Thickness of a Biological Membrane

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    Membrane thickness is thought to play a key role in protein function. Thus understanding the cell\u2019s ability to modulate the thickness of its membranes is essential in elucidating the structure/ function relationship in biological membranes. We have investigated the influence of cholesterol on the structure of \u201cthin\u201d (diC14:1PC) and \u201cthick\u201d (diC22:1PC) phospholipid bilayers using oriented multibilayers and small angle neutron di raction. Neutron contrast variation was used to determine the structure factors and the distribution of water across the bilayers. We found that in response to cholesterol, bilayer thickness changed in a similar fashion in both systems. The thickening of bilayers was rationalized in terms of cholesterol\u2019s ordering effect on the lipid\u2019s acyl chains, which dominates over the other option of rectifying the hydrophobic mismatch, surprisingly even in the case of diC22:1PC and cholesterol.Peer reviewed: YesNRC publication: Ye
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