18,839 research outputs found
Ab initio simulations of Cu binding sites in the N-terminal region of PrP
The prion protein (PrP) binds Cu2+ ions in the octarepeat domain of the
N-terminal tail up to full occupancy at pH=7.4. Recent experiments show that
the HGGG octarepeat subdomain is responsible for holding the metal bound in a
square planar coordination. By using first principle ab initio molecular
dynamics simulations of the Car-Parrinello type, the Cu coordination mode to
the binding sites of the PrP octarepeat region is investigated. Simulations are
carried out for a number of structured binding sites. Results for the complexes
Cu(HGGGW)+(wat), Cu(HGGG) and the 2[Cu(HGGG)] dimer are presented. While the
presence of a Trp residue and a H2O molecule does not seem to affect the nature
of the Cu coordination, high stability of the bond between Cu and the amide
Nitrogens of deprotonated Gly's is confirmed in the case of the Cu(HGGG)
system. For the more interesting 2[Cu(HGGG)] dimer a dynamically entangled
arrangement of the two monomers, with intertwined N-Cu bonds, emerges. This
observation is consistent with the highly packed structure seen in experiments
at full Cu occupancy.Comment: 4 pages, conference proceedin
A simple atomistic model for the simulation of the gel phase of lipid bilayers
In this paper we present the results of a large-scale numerical investigation
of structural properties of a model of cell membrane, simulated as a bilayer of
flexible molecules in vacuum. The study was performed by carrying out extensive
Molecular Dynamics simulations, in the (NVE) micro-canonical ensemble, of two
systems of different sizes (2x32 and 2x256 molecules), over a fairly large set
of temperatures and densities, using parallel platforms and more standard
serial computers. Depending on the dimension of the system, the dynamics was
followed for physical times that go from few hundred of picoseconds for the
largest system to 5--10 nanoseconds for the smallest one. We find that the
bilayer remains stable even in the absence of water and neglecting Coulomb
interactions in the whole range of temperatures and densities we have
investigated. The extension of the region of physical parameters that we have
explored has allowed us to study significant points in the phase diagram of the
bilayer and to expose marked structural changes as density and temperature are
varied, which are interpreted as the system passing from a crystal to a gel
phase.Comment: 41 pages, 13 figure
Parallel computing and molecular dynamics of biological membranes
In this talk I discuss the general question of the portability of Molecular
Dynamics codes for diffusive systems on parallel computers of the APE family.
The intrinsic single precision arithmetics of the today available APE platforms
does not seem to affect the numerical accuracy of the simulations, while the
absence of integer addressing from CPU to individual nodes puts strong
constraints on the possible programming strategies. Liquids can be very
satisfactorily simulated using the "systolic" method. For more complex systems,
like the biological ones at which we are ultimately interested in, the "domain
decomposition" approach is best suited to beat the quadratic growth of the
inter-molecular computational time with the number of elementary components of
the system. The promising perspectives of using this strategy for extensive
simulations of lipid bilayers are briefly reviewed.Comment: 4 pages LaTeX, 2 figures included, espcrc2.sty require
Multi-scale theoretical approach to X-ray absorption spectra in disordered systems: an application to the study of Zn(II) in water
We develop a multi-scale theoretical approach aimed at calculating from first
principles X-ray absorption spectra of liquid solutions and disordered systems.
We test the method by considering the paradigmatic case of Zn(II) in water
which, besides being relevant in itself, is also of interest for biology. With
the help of classical molecular dynamics simulations we start by producing
bunches of configurations differing for the Zn(II)-water coordination mode.
Different coordination modes are obtained by making use of the so-called dummy
atoms method. From the collected molecular dynamics trajectories, snapshots of
a more manageable subsystem encompassing the metal site and two solvation
layers are cut out. Density functional theory is used to optimize and relax
these reduced system configurations employing a uniform dielectric to mimic the
surrounding bulk liquid water. On the resulting structures, fully quantum
mechanical X-ray absorption spectra calculations are performed by including
core-hole effects and core-level shifts. The proposed approach does not rely on
any guessing or fitting of the force field or of the atomic positions of the
system. The comparison of the theoretically computed spectrum with the
experimental Zn K-edge XANES data unambiguously demonstrates that among the
different a priori possible geometries, Zn(II) in water lives in an octahedral
coordination mode.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figure
Dust from AGBs: relevant factors and modelling uncertainties
The dust formation process in the winds of Asymptotic Giant Branch stars is
discussed, based on full evolutionary models of stars with mass in the range
MMM, and metallicities .
Dust grains are assumed to form in an isotropically expanding wind, by growth
of pre--existing seed nuclei. Convection, for what concerns the treatment of
convective borders and the efficiency of the schematization adopted, turns out
to be the physical ingredient used to calculate the evolutionary sequences with
the highest impact on the results obtained. Low--mass stars with MM produce carbon type dust with also traces of silicon carbide. The
mass of solid carbon formed, fairly independently of metallicity, ranges from a
few M, for stars of initial mass M, to
M for MM; the size of dust
particles is in the range mm. On the contrary,
the production of silicon carbide (SiC) depends on metallicity. For the size of SiC grains varies in the range m, while the mass of SiC formed is
. Models of
higher mass experience Hot Bottom Burning, which prevents the formation of
carbon stars, and favours the formation of silicates and corundum. In this case
the results scale with metallicity, owing to the larger silicon and aluminium
contained in higher--Z models. At Z= we find that the most
massive stars produce dust masses M, whereas models of
smaller mass produce a dust mass ten times smaller. The main component of dust
are silicates, although corundum is also formed, in not negligible quantities
().Comment: Paper accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal
Astronomical Society Main Journal (2014 January 4
Masters and students in italian physics between the 19th and the 20th centuries: the Felici-Bartoli-Stracciati-Corbino case
In the second half of the 19th century, a special practice of research and training in physics took shape in Pisa, characterized by a particular attention to theoretical studies and to combining experimental activity with a profound mastery of mathematical tools. This peculiar approach, started by Carlo Matteucci and Ottaviano Mossotti,
continued and spread by Riccardo Felici, Enrico Betti, Adolfo Bartoli and Vito Volterra, was quite an exception in the framework generally marked by strict experimentalism and positivist empiricism of the Italian physics cabinets of the time. The present paper highlights a special path connecting this tradition of the Pisan school to the scientific
environment that was formed in the early years of the 20th century at the Royal Physical Institute in Via Panisperna in Rome, through the interaction of Orso Mario Corbino with Volterra on one side, and the imprinting left on Corbino by Adolfo Bartoli and his student and collaborator Enrico Stracciati
CLINICIAN-PATIENT RELATIONSHIP AND ADHERENCE TO TREATMENT
PATIENT'S ADHERENCE TO TREATMENT IS STRONGLY RELATED TO CLINICIAN'S ABILITY.ROLE OF EMPATHY, OF COMMUNICATION'S SKILLS ARE NOT INVESTIGATED ENOUGH, EVEN IF ACCORDING TO PATIENT'S OPINION THESE ABILITY ARE MORE IMPORTANT OF TECHNICAL SKILLS
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