The use of beta-solenoid proteins as functionalizable, nanoscale,
self-assembling molecular building blocks may have many applications, including
templating the growth of wires or higher-dimensional structures. By
understanding their mechanical strengths, we can efficiently design the
proteins for specific functions. We present a study of the mechanical
properties of seven beta-solenoid proteins using GROMACS molecular dynamics
software to produce force/torque-displacement data, implement umbrella sampling
of bending/twisting trajectories, produce Potentials of Mean Force (PMFs),
extract effective spring constants, and calculate rigidities for two bending
and two twisting directions for each protein. We examine the differences
between computing the strength values from force/torque-displacement data alone
and PMF data, and show how higher precision estimates can be obtained from the
former. In addition to the analysis of the methods, we report estimates for the
bend/twist persistence lengths for each protein, which range from 0.5-3.4
μm. We note that beta-solenoid proteins with internal disulfide bridges do
not enjoy enhanced bending or twisting strength, and that the strongest
correlate with bend/twist rigidity is the number of hydrogen bonds per turn. In
addition, we compute estimates of the Young's modulus (Y) for each protein,
which range from Y = 3.5 to 7.2 GPa