Computation of atomically detailed dynamics of biomolecules, or their reaction pathways, significantly enhances our understanding of their function and enables a better design of new biological materials. Nevertheless, a significant drawback of Molecular Dynamics (MD) simulations is of time scales. At present, routine simulations are not longer than hundreds of nanoseconds of real time. This time is far too short to investigate many biochemical processes, such as conformational transitions, protein activation, or protein folding, which may last from microseconds to minutes. It is proposed to further develop a new methodology (SDEL - Stochastic Difference Equation in Length) to compute bio-molecular dynamics on extended time scales. The new methodology is based on the optimization of an action and a solution of a boundary value problem. It enables the computations of approximate trajectories, in which high frequency modes are filtered out, based on length parameterization of the classical trajectory. The methodology was applied recently to study the folding of the protein Cytochrome C (a millisecond process). Comparison to experimental data was encouraging, and additional insight on the role of non-native contacts during folding has been obtained. It is proposed to extend these studies to include explicit solvent models, and to examine allosteric effects in a protein. It is also proposed to further develop a theory and a computational model that make it possible to extract rate constants from these approximate trajectories.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
3R01GM059796-07S1
Application #
7282177
Study Section
Molecular and Cellular Biophysics Study Section (BBCA)
Program Officer
Wehrle, Janna P
Project Start
2000-03-01
Project End
2008-02-29
Budget Start
2006-03-01
Budget End
2007-02-28
Support Year
7
Fiscal Year
2006
Total Cost
$24,869
Indirect Cost
Name
Cornell University
Department
Biostatistics & Other Math Sci
Type
Schools of Engineering
DUNS #
872612445
City
Ithaca
State
NY
Country
United States
Zip Code
14850
Fathizadeh, Arman; Elber, Ron (2018) Ion Permeation Through a Phospholipid Membrane: Transition State, Path Splitting, and Calculation of Permeability. J Chem Theory Comput :
Templeton, Clark; Elber, Ron (2018) Why Does RNA Collapse? The Importance of Water in a Simulation Study of Helix-Junction-Helix Systems. J Am Chem Soc :
Ma, Piao; Cardenas, Alfredo E; Chaudhari, Mangesh I et al. (2018) Probing Translocation in Mutants of the Anthrax Channel: Atomically Detailed Simulations with Milestoning. J Phys Chem B 122:10296-10305
Ma, Piao; Cardenas, Alfredo E; Chaudhari, Mangesh I et al. (2017) The Impact of Protonation on Early Translocation of Anthrax Lethal Factor: Kinetics from Molecular Dynamics Simulations and Milestoning Theory. J Am Chem Soc 139:14837-14840
Elber, Ron; Bello-Rivas, Juan M; Ma, Piao et al. (2017) Calculating Iso-Committor Surfaces as Optimal Reaction Coordinates with Milestoning. Entropy (Basel) 19:
Atis, Murat; Johnson, Kenneth A; Elber, Ron (2017) Pyrophosphate Release in the Protein HIV Reverse Transcriptase. J Phys Chem B 121:9557-9565
Shrestha, Rebika; Anderson, Cari M; Cardenas, Alfredo E et al. (2017) Direct Measurement of the Effect of Cholesterol and 6-Ketocholestanol on the Membrane Dipole Electric Field Using Vibrational Stark Effect Spectroscopy Coupled with Molecular Dynamics Simulations. J Phys Chem B 121:3424-3436
Templeton, Clark; Chen, Szu-Hua; Fathizadeh, Arman et al. (2017) Rock climbing: A local-global algorithm to compute minimum energy and minimum free energy pathways. J Chem Phys 147:152718
Aristoff, David; Bello-Rivas, Juan M; Elber, Ron (2016) A MATHEMATICAL FRAMEWORK FOR EXACT MILESTONING. Multiscale Model Simul 14:301-322
Chen, Szu-Hua; Meller, Jaroslaw; Elber, Ron (2016) Comprehensive analysis of sequences of a protein switch. Protein Sci 25:135-46

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