Free Energetics of Arginine Permeation into Model
DMPC Lipid Bilayers: Coupling of Effective Counterion Concentration
and Lateral Bilayer Dimensions
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Abstract
Mechanisms and underlying thermodynamic
determinants of translocation
of charged cationic peptides such as cell-penetrating peptides across
the cellular membrane continue to receive much attention. Two widely
held views include endocytotic and non-endocytotic (diffusive) processes
of permeant transfer across the bilayer. Considering a purely diffusive
process, we consider the free energetics of translocation of a monoarginine
peptide mimic across a model DMPC bilayer. We compute potentials of
mean force for the transfer of a charged monoarginine peptide unit
from water to the center of a 1,2-dimyristoyl-<i>sn</i>-glycero-3-phosphocholine
(DMPC) model lipid bilayer. We use fully atomistic molecular dynamics
simulations coupled with the adaptive biasing force (ABF) method for
free energy estimation. The estimated potential of mean force difference
from bulk to bilayer center is 6.94 ± 0.28 kcal/mol. The order
of magnitude of this prediction is consistent with past experimental
estimates of arginine partitioning into physiological bilayers in
the context of translocon-based experiments, though the correlation
between the bench and computer experiments is not unambiguous. Moreover,
the present value is roughly one-half of previous estimates based
on all-atom molecular dynamics free energy calculations. We trace
the differences between the present and earlier calculations to system
sizes used in the simulations and the dependence of the contributions
to the free energy from various system components (water, lipids,
ions, peptide) on overall system size. By varying the bilayer lateral
dimensions in simulations using only sufficient numbers of counterions
to maintain overall system charge neutrality, we find the possibility
of an inherent convergent transfer free energy value