45 research outputs found
Quantification of Membrane Free Area and Dynamic Undulations using Fluorescence Lifetime and Autocorrelation of Fluorescence Lifetime Fluctuations
Quantification of Membrane Free Area and Dynamic Undulations using Fluorescence Lifetime and Autocorrelation of Fluorescence Lifetime Fluctuations
Enthalpy Drives Phase Separation in Model Membranes: Evidence from Molecular Dynamics Simulations of Non-Lipid Amphiphiles Vitamin-E, triton-X, and Benzyl Alcohol
Calculation and visualization of atomistic mechanical stresses in nanomaterials and biomolecules.
Many biomolecules have machine-like functions, and accordingly are discussed in terms of mechanical properties like force and motion. However, the concept of stress, a mechanical property that is of fundamental importance in the study of macroscopic mechanics, is not commonly applied in the biomolecular context. We anticipate that microscopical stress analyses of biomolecules and nanomaterials will provide useful mechanistic insights and help guide molecular design. To enable such applications, we have developed Calculator of Atomistic Mechanical Stress (CAMS), an open-source software package for computing atomic resolution stresses from molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. The software also enables decomposition of stress into contributions from bonded, nonbonded and Generalized Born potential terms. CAMS reads GROMACS topology and trajectory files, which are easily generated from AMBER files as well; and time-varying stresses may be animated and visualized in the VMD viewer. Here, we review relevant theory and present illustrative applications
Bind3P: Optimization of a Water Model with Host-Guest Binding Data
We report a water model, Bind3P (Version 0.1), which was obtained by using sensitivity analysis to readjust the Lennard-Jones parameters of the TIP3P model against experimental binding free energies for six host-guest systems, along with pure liquid properties. Tests of Bind3P against >100 experimental binding free energies and enthalpies for host-guest systems distinct from the training set show a consistent drop in the mean signed error, relative to matched calculations with TIP3P. Importantly, Bind3P also yields some improvement in the hydration free energies of small organic molecules, and preserves the accuracy of bulk water properties, such as density and the heat of vaporization. The same approach can be applied to more sophisticated water models that can better represent pure water properties. These results lend further support to concept of integrating host-guest binding data into force field parameterization