2 research outputs found
Ab Initio Molecular Dynamics of Na<sup>+</sup> and Mg<sup>2+</sup> Countercations at the Backbone of RNA in Water Solution
The interactions between sodium or
magnesium ions and phosphate
groups of the RNA backbone represented as dinucleotide fragments in
water solution have been studied using ab initio Born–Oppenheimer
molecular dynamics. All systems have been simulated at 300 and 320
K. Sodium ions have mobility higher than that of the magnesium ions
and readily change their position with respect to the phosphate groups,
from directly bonded to completely solvated state, with a rough estimate
of the lifetime of bonded Na<sup>+</sup> of about 20–30 ps.
The coordination number of the sodium ions frequently changes in irregular
intervals ranging from several femtoseconds to about 10 ps with the
most frequently encountered coordination number five, followed by
six. The magnesium ion is stable both as directly bonded to an oxygen
atom from the phosphate group and completely solvated by water. In
both states the Mg<sup>2+</sup> ion has exactly six oxygen atoms in
the first coordination shell; moreover, during the whole simulation
of more than 100 ps no exchange of ligand in the first coordination
shells has been observed. Solvation of the terminal phosphate oxygen
atoms by water molecules forming hydrogen bonds in different locations
of the ions is also discussed. The stability of the system containing
sodium ions essentially does not depend on the position of the ions
with respect to the phosphate groups
Ab Initio Molecular Dynamics of Na<sup>+</sup> and Mg<sup>2+</sup> Countercations at the Backbone of RNA in Water Solution
The interactions between sodium or
magnesium ions and phosphate
groups of the RNA backbone represented as dinucleotide fragments in
water solution have been studied using ab initio Born–Oppenheimer
molecular dynamics. All systems have been simulated at 300 and 320
K. Sodium ions have mobility higher than that of the magnesium ions
and readily change their position with respect to the phosphate groups,
from directly bonded to completely solvated state, with a rough estimate
of the lifetime of bonded Na<sup>+</sup> of about 20–30 ps.
The coordination number of the sodium ions frequently changes in irregular
intervals ranging from several femtoseconds to about 10 ps with the
most frequently encountered coordination number five, followed by
six. The magnesium ion is stable both as directly bonded to an oxygen
atom from the phosphate group and completely solvated by water. In
both states the Mg<sup>2+</sup> ion has exactly six oxygen atoms in
the first coordination shell; moreover, during the whole simulation
of more than 100 ps no exchange of ligand in the first coordination
shells has been observed. Solvation of the terminal phosphate oxygen
atoms by water molecules forming hydrogen bonds in different locations
of the ions is also discussed. The stability of the system containing
sodium ions essentially does not depend on the position of the ions
with respect to the phosphate groups