Title: Hydropathyphobicityphilicity
1Hydro-pathy/phobicity/philicity
- One of the most commonly used properties is the
suitability of an amino acid for an aqueous
environment - Hydropathy Hydrophobicity
- degree to which something is water hating or
water fearing - Hydrophilicity
- degree to which something is water loving
2Hydrophobicity/Hydrophilicity Tables
- Describe the likelihood that each amino acid will
be found in an aqueous environment - one value
for each amino acid - Commonly used tables
- Kyte-Doolittle hydropathy
- Hopp-Woods hydrophilicity
- Eisenberg et al. normalized consensus
hydrophobicity
3Kyte-Doolittle hydropathy
4Example Hydrophilicity Plot
This plot is for a tubulin, a soluble cytoplasmic
protein. Regions with high hydrophilicity are
likely to be exposed to the solvent (cytoplasm),
while those with low hydrophilicity are likely to
be internal or interacting with other proteins.
5Amphiphilicity/Amphipathicity
- A structural domain of a protein (e.g., an
?-helix) can be present at an interface between
polar and non-polar environments - Example Domain of a membrane-associated protein
that anchors it to membrane - Such a domain will ideally be hydrophilic on one
side and hydrophobic on the other - This is termed an amphiphilic or amphipathic
sequence or domain
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7Screenshot of a phospholipid bilayer in the
process of its modeling. Shown is a computational
cell consisting of 96 PhCh molecules and 2304
water molecules which on the whole make up 20544
atoms.
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9Average number of hydrogen bonds within the first
water shell around an ion
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11Molecular Dynamics Introduction
- Newtons second law of motion
12Molecular Dynamics Introduction
- We need to know
- The motion of the
- atoms in a molecule, x(t)
- and therefore,
- the potential energy, V(x)
13Molecular Dynamics Introduction
- How do we describe the potential energy V(x) for
a - molecule?
- Potential Energy includes terms for
- Bond stretching
- Angle Bending
- Torsional rotation
- Improper dihedrals
14Molecular Dynamics Introduction
- Potential energy includes terms for (contd.)
- Electrostatic
- Interactions
- van der Waals
- Interactions
15Molecular Dynamics Introduction
- In general, given the values x1, v1 and the
potential energy V(x), the molecular trajectory
x(t) can be calculated, using,
16How a molecule changes during MD
17Contributions to Potential Energy
- Total pair energy breaks into a sum of terms
- UvdW van der Waals
- Uel electrostatic
- Upol polarization
- Ustr stretch
- Ubend bend
- Utors torsion
- Ucross cross
18Contributions to Potential Energy
- Total pair energy breaks into a sum of terms
- UvdW van der Waals
- Uel electrostatic
- Upol polarization
- Ustr stretch
- Ubend bend
- Utors torsion
- Ucross cross
19Contributions to Potential Energy
- Total pair energy breaks into a sum of terms
- UvdW van der Waals
- Uel electrostatic
- Upol polarization
- Ustr stretch
- Ubend bend
- Utors torsion
- Ucross cross
20Contributions to Potential Energy
- Total pair energy breaks into a sum of terms
- UvdW van der Waals
- Uel electrostatic
- Upol polarization
- Ustr stretch
- Ubend bend
- Utors torsion
- Ucross cross
21Contributions to Potential Energy
- Total pair energy breaks into a sum of terms
- UvdW van der Waals
- Uel electrostatic
- Upol polarization
- Ustr stretch
- Ubend bend
- Utors torsion
- Ucross cross
22Contributions to Potential Energy
- Total pair energy breaks into a sum of terms
- UvdW van der Waals
- Uel electrostatic
- Upol polarization
- Ustr stretch
- Ubend bend
- Utors torsion
- Ucross cross
23Contributions to Potential Energy
- Total pair energy breaks into a sum of terms
Repulsion
- UvdW van der Waals
- Uel electrostatic
- Upol polarization
- Ustr stretch
- Ubend bend
- Utors torsion
- Ucross cross
Mixed terms
24Contributions to Potential Energy
- Total pair energy breaks into a sum of terms
Repulsion
- UvdW van der Waals
- Uel electrostatic
- Upol polarization
- Ustr stretch
- Ubend bend
- Utors torsion
- Ucross cross
Mixed terms
25Contributions to Potential Energy
- Total pair energy breaks into a sum of terms
Repulsion
- UvdW van der Waals
- Uel electrostatic
- Upol polarization
- Ustr stretch
- Ubend bend
- Utors torsion
- Ucross cross
Attraction
-
Mixed terms
26Contributions to Potential Energy
- Total pair energy breaks into a sum of terms
Repulsion
- UvdW van der Waals
- Uel electrostatic
- Upol polarization
- Ustr stretch
- Ubend bend
- Utors torsion
- Ucross cross
Attraction
Mixed terms
27Contributions to Potential Energy
- Total pair energy breaks into a sum of terms
Repulsion
- UvdW van der Waals
- Uel electrostatic
- Upol polarization
- Ustr stretch
- Ubend bend
- Utors torsion
- Ucross cross
Attraction
-
Mixed terms
28Contributions to Potential Energy
- Total pair energy breaks into a sum of terms
Repulsion
- UvdW van der Waals
- Uel electrostatic
- Upol polarization
- Ustr stretch
- Ubend bend
- Utors torsion
- Ucross cross
Attraction
u(2)
u(2)
-
u(N)
Mixed terms
29Contributions to Potential Energy
- Total pair energy breaks into a sum of terms
Repulsion
- UvdW van der Waals
- Uel electrostatic
- Upol polarization
- Ustr stretch
- Ubend bend
- Utors torsion
- Ucross cross
Attraction
u(2)
u(2)
-
u(N)
-
Mixed terms
30Modeling Potential energy
31Modeling Potential energy
32Stretch Energy
- Expand energy about equilibrium position
- Model fails in strained geometries
- better model is the Morse potential
(neglect)
minimum
define
harmonic
Morse
dissociation energy
force constant
33Bending Energy
q
- Expand energy about equilibrium position
- improvements based on including higher-order
terms - Out-of-plane bending
(neglect)
minimum
define
harmonic
u(4)
c
34Torsional Energy
f
- Two new features
- periodic
- weak (Taylor expansion in f not appropriate)
- Fourier series
- terms are included to capture appropriate
minima/maxima - depends on substituent atoms
- e.g., ethane has three mimum-energy conformations
- n 3, 6, 9, etc.
- depends on type of bond
- e.g. ethane vs. ethylene
- usually at most n 1, 2, and/or 3 terms are
included
35Van der Waals Attraction
- Correlation of electron fluctuations
- Stronger for larger, more polarizable molecules
- CCl4 gt CH4 Kr gt Ar gt He
- Theoretical formula for long-range behavior
- Only attraction present between nonpolar
molecules - reason that Ar, He, CH4, etc. form liquid phases
- a.k.a. London or dispersion forces
-
36Van der Waals Repulsion
- Overlap of electron clouds
- Theory provides little guidance on form of model
- Two popular treatments
- inverse power exponential
- typically n 9 - 12 two parameters
- Combine with attraction term
- Lennard-Jones model Exp-6
a.k.a. Buckingham or Hill
Beware of anomalous Exp-6 short-range attraction
Exp-6 repulsion is slightly softer
37Electrostatics 1.
- Interaction between charge inhomogeneities
- Modeling approaches
- point charges
- point multipoles
- Point charges
- assign Coulombic charges to several points in the
molecule - total charge sums to charge on molecule (usually
zero) - Coulomb potential
- very long ranged
38Electrostatics 2.
- At larger separations, details of charge
distribution are less important - Multipole statistics capture basic features
- Dipole
- Quadrupole
- Octopole, etc.
- Point multipole models based on long-range
behavior - dipole-dipole
- dipole-quadrupole
- quadrupole-quadrupole
Vector
Tensor
Axially symmetric quadrupole
39Polarization
- Charge redistribution due to influence of
surrounding molecules - dipole moment in bulk different from that in
vacuum - Modeled with polarizable charges or multipoles
- Involves an iterative calculation
- evaluate electric field acting on each charge due
to other charges - adjust charges according to polarizability and
electric field - re-compute electric field and repeat to
convergence - Re-iteration over all molecules required if even
one is moved
-
40Polarization
Approximation
Electrostatic field does not include
contributions from atom i
41Common Approximations in Molecular Models
- Rigid intramolecular degrees of freedom
- fast intramolecular motions slow down MD
calculations - Ignore hydrogen atoms
- united atom representation
- Ignore polarization
- expensive n-body effect
- Ignore electrostatics
- Treat whole molecule as one big atom
- maybe anisotropic
- Model vdW forces via discontinuous potentials
- Ignore all attraction
- Model space as a lattice
- especially useful for polymer molecules
Qualitative models
42Molecular Dynamics Introduction
- Equation for covalent terms in P.E.
43Molecular Dynamics Introduction
- Equation for non-bonded terms in P.E.
44DNA in a box of water
45SNAPSHOTS
46Protein dynamics study
- Ion channel / water channel
- Mechanical properties
- Protein stretching
- DNA bending
Movie downloaded from theoreticla biophysics
group, UIUC
47Solvent dielectric models
Effetive dielectric constant