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Role of hydrogen bonds in molecular relaxation during electron transport processes in biological systems
Computer Research and Modeling, 2009, v. 1, no. 3, pp. 297-320Views (last year): 6. Citations: 3 (RSCI).In molecular systems with hydrogen bonds the mechanism of proton relaxation can take place. It is caused by redistribution of protons between two steady positions in double walls potential along the line of the hydrogen bond. This redistribution occurs at change of parameters of the double walls potential of the hydrogen bond which is caused by change of an electronic state of molecular system. The relaxation process is carried out due to a tunnel transfer of protons along the line of bonds. It is shown, that relaxation process can define temperature dependence of power parameters (either of the free energy differences ΔG or of the reorganization energy λ) of charge recombination P+Q-A from RC of Rhodobacter sphaeroides.
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Anharmonic vibrational resonances in small water clusters
Computer Research and Modeling, 2009, v. 1, no. 3, pp. 321-336Views (last year): 1. Citations: 4 (RSCI).Numerical calculations of structures and vibrational spectra of small water clusters are performed by solution of the molecular Schrodinger equation in the density functional theory framework using B3LYP and X3LYP hybrid functionals. Spectral features and evolution of hydrogen bond properties in clusters with their size increasing are discussed. The vibrotational Hamiltonian parameters and Fermi and Darling-Dennison anharmonic resonances in small water oligomers are determined. Obtained results may be used in quantum mechanics/molecular dynamics simulations of water and processes in active site of enzyme.
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The mechanism of dissociation of cytosine pairs mediated by silver ions
Computer Research and Modeling, 2019, v. 11, no. 4, pp. 685-693Views (last year): 2.The development of structured molecular systems based on a nucleic acid framework takes into account the ability of single-stranded DNA to form a stable double-stranded structure due to stacking interactions and hydrogen bonds of complementary pairs of nucleotides. To increase the stability of the DNA double helix and to expand the temperature range in the hybridization protocols, it was proposed to use more stable metal-mediated complexes of nucleotide pairs as an alternative to Watson-Crick hydrogen bonds. One of the most frequently considered options is the use of silver ions to stabilize a pair of cytosines from opposite DNA strands. Silver ions specifically bind to N3 cytosines along the helix axis to form, as is believed, a strong N3–Ag+–N3 bond, relative to which, two rotational isomers, the cis- and trans-configurations of C–Ag+–C can be formed. In present work, a theoretical study and a comparative analysis of the free energy profile of the dissociation of two С–Ag+–C isomers were carried out using the combined method of molecular mechanics and quantum chemistry (QM/MM). As a result, it was shown that the cis-configuration is more favorable in energy than the trans- for a single pair of cytosines, and the geometry of the global minimum at free energy profile for both isomers differs from the equilibrium geometries obtained previously by quantum chemistry methods. Apparently, the silver ion stabilization model of the DNA duplex should take into account not only the direct binding of silver ions to cytosines, but also the presence of related factors, such as stacking interaction in extended DNA, interplanar hydrogen bonds, and metallophilic interaction of neighboring silver ions.
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Molecular dynamics study of complexes of a DNA aptamer with AMP and GMP
Computer Research and Modeling, 2021, v. 13, no. 6, pp. 1191-1203This study is devoted to a comparative study of the conformational stability of the DNA aptamer to adenosine derivatives in a free state and in a complex with AMP and HMP molecules by use of molecular dynamics. It was shown that, in the free state, the structure of the inner loop of the DNA aptamer hairpin, due to the special packing of guanines, closes the cavity of the binding site from external ligands, and the condition for the specific selection of adenosine derivatives in comparison with guanine arises. New stabilization factors of the AMP and aptamer complex have been revealed — hydrogen bonds between the O3’ of the ribose atom of the ligands with the oxygen of the nearest phosphate group. It was also shown that guanines, which form hydrogen bonds with AMP within the binding site, are additionally stabilized by hydrogen bonds with phosphate groups opposing along the chain. The proposed scheme is in qualitative agreement with the experimental data, according to which the aptamer in solution acquires a hairpin conformation with the formation of a binding site, while the formed site exhibits high specificity when interacting only with adenosine derivatives.
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Modelling of conformational change within photosynthetic reaction center of Rb. sphaeroides bacteria
Computer Research and Modeling, 2009, v. 1, no. 4, pp. 437-448Views (last year): 2.A possible conformational change, which accompanies electron tranport in Rb. sphaeroides photosynthetic reaction center (RC), was studied using quantum-chemical approach. A kinetic model which takes into account two conformational states of RC is proposed. The model quantitatively describes experimental temperature dependencies of recombination reaction rate P+QA- → PQA. Quantum-chemical modeling of primary quinone (QA) binding site permits one to propose a minor shift of QA as a conformational change of interest. The shift is accompanied by break of a hydrogen bond between 4–C=O group of QA and histidine M219, and formation of a new hydrogen bond between QA and hydroxyl group of threonine M222. Characteristics of this conformational change were obtained from quantum-chemical calculations and match parameters of kinetic model in qualitative fashion.
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Molecular dynamics study of the effect of mutations in the tropomyosin molecule on the properties of thin filaments of the heart muscle
Computer Research and Modeling, 2024, v. 16, no. 2, pp. 513-524Muscle contraction is controlled by Ca2+ ions via regulatory proteins, troponin and tropomyosin, associated with thin actin filaments in sarcomeres. Depending on the Ca2+ concentration, the thin filament rearranges so that tropomyosin moves along its surface, opening or closing access to actin for the motor domains of myosin molecules, and causing contraction or relaxation, respectively. Numerous point amino acid substitutions in tropomyosin are known, leading to genetic pathologies — myo- and cardiomyopathies caused by changes in the structural and functional properties of the thin filament. The results of molecular dynamics modeling of a fragment of a thin filament of cardiac muscle sarcomeres formed by fibrillar actin and wildtype tropomyosin or with amino acid substitutions: the double stabilizing substitution D137L/G126R and the cardiomyopathic substitution S215L are presented. For numerical calculations, we used a new model of a thin filament fragment containing 26 actin monomers and 4 tropomyosin dimers, with a refined structure of the region of overlap of neighboring tropomyosin molecules in each of the two tropomyosin strands. The simulation results showed that tropomyosin significantly increases the bending stiffness of the thin filament, as previously found experimentally. The double stabilizing replacement D137L/G126R leads to a further increase in this rigidity, and the replacement S215L, on the contrary, leads to its decrease, which also corresponds to experimental data. At the same time, these substitutions have different effects on the angular mobility of the actin helix and only slightly modulate the angular mobility of tropomyosin cables relative to the actin helix and the population of hydrogen bonds between negatively charged tropomyosin residues and positively charged actin residues. The results of the verification of the new model demonstrate that its quality is sufficient for the numerical study of the effect of single amino acid substitutions on the structure and dynamics of thin filaments and study the effects leading to dysregulation of muscle contraction. This model can be used as a useful tool for elucidating the molecular mechanisms of some genetic diseases and assessing the pathogenicity of newly discovered genetic variants.
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