2006 APS March Meeting
Monday–Friday, March 13–17, 2006;
Baltimore, MD
Session K7: New Methods and Algorithms for Biomolecular Modeling
2:30 PM–5:30 PM,
Tuesday, March 14, 2006
Baltimore Convention Center
Room: 307
Sponsoring
Unit:
DBP
Chair: Christopher Roland, North Carolina State University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2006.MAR.K7.1
Abstract: K7.00001 : Adaptive Biasing Force Method for Vector Free Energy Calculations
2:30 PM–3:06 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Eric Darve
(Stanford)
The adaptive biasing force method is an efficient technique to
compute the potential of mean force along a reaction coordinate
and for alchemical transformations. We present recent
developments of the method for vector free energy calculations
(i.e. for several reaction coordinates or for multiple
alchemical transformations). General formulas are derived and
their relative merit is discussed. In particular, many
techniques require the ability to calculate second order
derivatives and are therefore cumbersome to implement for
complex reaction coordinates. We present new formulations
requiring first derivatives only. Our approach will be compared
with other popular techniques such as metadynamics.
Application examples will be provided for simple examples, such
as alanine dipeptide, and a more advanced one: the insertion of
an amphipathic helix inside a cell membrane.
For the latter, we will examine the stability of the inserted
peptide relative to the interfacial configuration and its role
in the association of individual peptides into larger
multimeric structures, such as cellular channels. Our candidate
for studies is the synthetic peptide (LSLLLSL)$_3$. It was
shown experimentally that, in the presence of an electric
field, the orientation changes from parallel to the membrane to
perpendicular and the location of the center-of-mass (COM)
changes from the membrane surface to the center of the lipid
bilayer. Experimental results, however, provide no information
about stability of individual helices in the transmembrane
orientation.
We will present results on the free energy surface of insertion
of (LSLLLSL)$_3$ as a function of two coordinates: the distance
of the COM of the peptide to the center of the membrane and the
orientation of the helix relative to the membrane surface. Our
results show that there is a global minimum corresponding to
the parallel orientation at the water-membrane interface. The
transmembrane arrangement of a single peptide is only
metastable, i.e. it corresponds to a local minimum.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2006.MAR.K7.1