24 research outputs found
Attraction Between Like-Charged Walls: Short-Ranged Simulations Using Local Molecular Field Theory
Effective attraction between like-charged walls mediated by counterions is
studied using local molecular field (LMF) theory. Monte Carlo simulations of
the "mimic system'' given by LMF theory, with short-ranged "Coulomb core"
interactions in an effective single particle potential incorporating a
mean-field average of the long-ranged Coulomb interactions, provide a direct
test of the theory, and are in excellent agreement with more complex
simulations of the full Coulomb system by Moreira and Netz [Eur. Phys. J. E 8,
33 (2002)]. A simple, generally-applicable criterion to determine the
consistency parameter sigma_{min} needed for accurate use of the LMF theory is
presented
Local molecular field theory for the treatment of electrostatics
We examine in detail the theoretical underpinnings of previous successful
applications of local molecular field (LMF) theory to charged systems. LMF
theory generally accounts for the averaged effects of long-ranged components of
the intermolecular interactions by using an effective or restructured external
field. The derivation starts from the exact Yvon-Born-Green hierarchy and shows
that the approximation can be very accurate when the interactions averaged over
are slowly varying at characteristic nearest-neighbor distances. Application of
LMF theory to Coulomb interactions alone allows for great simplifications of
the governing equations. LMF theory then reduces to a single equation for a
restructured electrostatic potential that satisfies Poisson's equation defined
with a smoothed charge density. Because of this charge smoothing by a Gaussian
of width sigma, this equation may be solved more simply than the detailed
simulation geometry might suggest. Proper choice of the smoothing length sigma
plays a major role in ensuring the accuracy of this approximation. We examine
the results of a basic confinement of water between corrugated wall and justify
the simple LMF equation used in a previous publication. We further generalize
these results to confinements that include fixed charges in order to
demonstrate the broader impact of charge smoothing by sigma. The slowly-varying
part of the restructured electrostatic potential will be more symmetric than
the local details of confinements.Comment: To be published in J Phys-Cond Matt; small misprint corrected in Eq.
(12) in V
Deconstructing classical water models at interfaces and in bulk
Using concepts from perturbation and local molecular field theories of
liquids we divide the potential of the SPC/E water model into short and long
ranged parts. The short ranged parts define a minimal reference network model
that captures very well the structure of the local hydrogen bond network in
bulk water while ignoring effects of the remaining long ranged interactions.
This deconstruction can provide insight into the different roles that the local
hydrogen bond network, dispersion forces, and long ranged dipolar interactions
play in determining a variety of properties of SPC/E and related classical
models of water. Here we focus on the anomalous behavior of the internal
pressure and the temperature dependence of the density of bulk water. We
further utilize these short ranged models along with local molecular field
theory to quantify the influence of these interactions on the structure of
hydrophobic interfaces and the crossover from small to large scale hydration
behavior. The implications of our findings for theories of hydrophobicity and
possible refinements of classical water models are also discussed
On the Equivalence of Schemes for Simulating Bilayers at Constant Surface Tension
Lipid bilayers are simulated using flexible simulation
cells in
order to allow for relaxations in area per lipid as bilayer content
and temperature are varied. We develop a suite of Monte Carlo (MC)
moves designed to generate constant surface tension γ and constant
pressure <i>P</i> and find that the <i>NPT</i> partition function proposed by Attard [<i>J. Chem. Phys.</i> <b>1995</b>, <i>103</i>, 9884–9885] leads
to an <i>NP</i>γ<i>T</i> partition function
with a form invariant to choice of independent shape variables. We
then compare this suite of MC moves to <i>NP</i>γ<i>T</i> MC moves previously employed in our group as well as a
pair of MC moves designed to replicate the <i>NP</i><sub>∥</sub><i>P</i><sub>⊥</sub><i>T</i> “ensemble” often used in molecular dynamics simulations
to yield zero surface tension and constant pressure. A detailed analysis
of shape fluctuations in a small bilayer system reveals that the two
latter MC move sets are different from one another as well as from
our new suite of MC moves, as justified by careful analysis of the
partition functions. However, the study of a larger bilayer system
reveals that, for practical purposes for this system, all six MC move
sets are comparable to one another
Effects of Pressure and Temperature on the Atomic Fluctuations of Dihydrofolate Reductase from a Psychropiezophile and a Mesophile
Determining the effects of extreme conditions on proteins from “extremophilic„ and mesophilic microbes is important for understanding how life adapts to living at extremes as well as how extreme conditions can be used for sterilization and food preservation. Previous molecular dynamics simulations of dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) from a psychropiezophile (cold- and pressure-loving), Moritella profunda (Mp), and a mesophile, Escherichia coli (Ec), at various pressures and temperatures indicate that atomic fluctuations, which are important for enzyme function, increase with both temperature and pressure. Here, the factors that cause increases in atomic fluctuations in the simulations are examined. The fluctuations increase with temperature not only because of greater thermal energy and thermal expansion of the protein but also because hydrogen bonds between protein atoms are weakened. However, the increase in fluctuations with pressure cannot be due to thermal energy, which remains constant, nor the compressive effects of pressure, but instead, the hydrogen bonds are also weakened. In addition, increased temperature causes larger increases in fluctuations of the loop regions of MpDHFR than EcDHFR, and increased pressure causes both increases and decreases in fluctuations of the loops, which differ between the two