The march toward exascale computing
will enable routine molecular
simulation of larger and more complex systems, for example, simulation
of entire viral particles, on the scale of approximately billions
of atomsa simulation size commensurate with a small bacterial
cell. Anticipating the future hardware capabilities that will enable
this type of research and paralleling advances in experimental structural
biology, efforts are currently underway to develop software tools,
procedures, and workflows for constructing cell-scale structures.
Herein, we describe our efforts in developing and implementing an
efficient and robust workflow for construction of cell-scale membrane
envelopes and embedding membrane proteins into them. A new approach
for construction of massive membrane structures that are stable during
the simulations is built on implementing a subtractive assembly technique
coupled with the development of a structure concatenation tool (fastmerge),
which eliminates overlapping elements based on volumetric criteria
rather than adding successive molecules to the simulation system.
Using this approach, we have constructed two “protocells”
consisting of MARTINI coarse-grained beads to represent cellular membranes,
one the size of a cellular organelle and another the size of a small
bacterial cell. The membrane envelopes constructed here remain whole
during the molecular dynamics simulations performed and exhibit water
flux only through specific proteins, demonstrating the success of
our methodology in creating tight cell-like membrane compartments.
Extended simulations of these cell-scale structures highlight the
propensity for nonspecific interactions between adjacent membrane
proteins leading to the formation of protein microclusters on the
cell surface, an insight uniquely enabled by the scale of the simulations.
We anticipate that the experiences and best practices presented here
will form the basis for the next generation of cell-scale models,
which will begin to address the addition of soluble proteins, nucleic
acids, and small molecules essential to the function of a cell