Search results for "Quantitative Biology::Subcellular Processes"

showing 10 items of 97 documents

Monte Carlo analysis of polymer translocation with deterministic and noisy electric fields

2012

AbstractPolymer translocation through the nanochannel is studied by means of a Monte Carlo approach, in the presence of a static or oscillating external electric voltage. The polymer is described as a chain molecule according to the two-dimensional “bond fluctuation model”. It moves through a piecewise linear channel, which mimics a nanopore in a biological membrane. The monomers of the chain interact with the walls of the channel, modelled as a reflecting barrier. We analyze the polymer dynamics, concentrating on the translocation time through the channel, when an external electric field is applied. By introducing a source of coloured noise, we analyze the effect of correlated random fluct…

Materials scienceQC1-999transport dynamics of biomoleculeMonte Carlo methodpolymer moleculespolymer moleculeGeneral Physics and AstronomyQuantitative Biology::Subcellular ProcessesPiecewise linear functionmonte carlo simulationsnoise in biological systemChain (algebraic topology)Electric fieldStatistical physicschemistry.chemical_classificationPhysics::Biological PhysicsQuantitative Biology::Biomoleculestransport dynamics of biomoleculesPhysicsPolymernoise in biological systemsNanoporechemistryChemical physicsCommunication channelVoltageOpen Physics
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Designing voltage multipliers with nanofluidic diodes immersed in aqueous salt solutions.

2016

[EN] Membranes with nanofluidic diodes allow the selective control of molecules in physiological salt solutions at ambient temperature. The electrical coupling of the membranes with conventional electronic elements such as capacitors suggests opportunities for the external monitoring of sensors and actuators. We demonstrate experimentally and theoretically the voltage multiplier functionality of simple electrical networks composed of membranes with conical nanopores coupled to load capacitors. The robust operation of half and full wave voltage multipliers is achieved in a broad range of experimental conditions (single pore and multipore membranes, electrolyte concentrations, voltage amplitu…

Materials sciencebusiness.industryAnalytical chemistryGeneral Physics and Astronomy02 engineering and technologyElectrolyte010402 general chemistry021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology01 natural sciences0104 chemical scienceslaw.inventionQuantitative Biology::Subcellular ProcessesCapacitorNanoporeMembranelawElectrical networkFISICA APLICADAVoltage multiplierOptoelectronicsPhysical and Theoretical Chemistry0210 nano-technologybusinessVoltageDiodePhysical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP
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Model calculations of ion transport against its concentration gradient when the driving force is a pH difference across a charged membrane

1997

Model calculations of the steady-state ion transport against its external concentration gradient when the driving force of this transport is a pH difference across a charged membrane are presented. We have solved numerically the exact Nernst-Planck equations without any additional simplifying approximation, such as the Goldman constant field assumption within the membrane. The validity of this assumption for a broad range of pH values, and salt and membrane fixed charge concentrations was analyzed critically. The membrane characteristics studied are the ionic fluxes and the membrane potential. Special attention is paid to the physical mechanism which leads to the ion transport against the c…

Membrane potentialRange (particle radiation)Computer simulationChemistryAnalytical chemistryFiltration and SeparationCharge (physics)BiochemistryIonQuantitative Biology::Subcellular ProcessesMembraneChemical physicsGeneral Materials SciencePhysical and Theoretical ChemistryConcentration gradientIon transporterJournal of Membrane Science
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FLUCTUATIONS IN LIPID BILAYERS: ARE THEY UNDERSTOOD?

2013

We review recent computer simulation studies of undulating lipid bilayers. Theoretical interpretations of such fluctuating membranes are most commonly based on generalized Helfrich-type elastic models, with additional contributions of local "protrusions" and/or density fluctuations. Such models provide an excellent basis for describing the fluctuations of tensionless bilayers in the fluid phase at a quantitative level. However, this description is found to fail for membranes in the gel phase and for membranes subject to high tensions. The fluctuations of tilted gel membranes show a signature of the modulated ripple structure, which is a nearby phase observed in the pretransition regime betw…

Mesoscopic physicsCondensed matter physicsChemistryTension (physics)General problemRippleBiophysicsFOS: Physical sciencesContext (language use)Condensed Matter - Soft Condensed MatterQuantitative Biology::Cell BehaviorQuantitative Biology::Subcellular ProcessesCrystallographyMembraneBiological Physics (physics.bio-ph)Structural BiologyPhase (matter)Soft Condensed Matter (cond-mat.soft)Physics - Biological PhysicsLipid bilayerMolecular BiologyBiophysical Reviews and Letters
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Effective stiffening of DNA due to nematic ordering causes DNA molecules packed in phage capsids to preferentially form torus knots.

2012

Observation that DNA molecules in bacteriophage capsids preferentially form torus type of knots provided a sensitive gauge to evaluate various models of DNA arrangement in phage heads. Only models resulting in a preponderance of torus knots could be considered as close to reality. Recent studies revealed that experimentally observed enrichment of torus knots can be qualitatively reproduced in numerical simulations that include a potential inducing nematic arrangement of tightly packed DNA molecules within phage capsids. Here, we investigate what aspects of the nematic arrangement are crucial for inducing formation of torus knots. Our results indicate that the effective stiffening of DNA by …

Models MolecularBacteriophages/genetics; Capsid/chemistry; DNA Viral/chemistry; Models Molecular; Virus AssemblyvirusesBacteriophageQuantitative Biology::Subcellular Processeschemistry.chemical_compoundCapsidstomatognathic systemLiquid crystalStructural BiologyGeneticsMoleculeBacteriophagesDna viralQuantitative Biology::BiomoleculesbiologyVirus Assemblyfood and beveragesTorusbiology.organism_classificationVirologyQuantitative Biology::GenomicsMathematics::Geometric TopologyStiffeningsurgical procedures operativechemistryCapsidDNA ViralBiophysicsDNANucleic acids research
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Influence of Whole-Body Dynamics on 15N PISEMA NMR Spectra of Membrane Proteins: A Theoretical Analysis

2009

AbstractMembrane proteins and peptides exhibit a preferred orientation in the lipid bilayer while fluctuating in an anisotropic manner. Both the orientation and the dynamics have direct functional implications, but motions are usually not accessible, and structural descriptions are generally static. Using simulated data, we analyze systematically the impact of whole-body motions on the peptide orientations calculated from two-dimensional polarization inversion spin exchange at the magic angle (PISEMA) NMR. Fluctuations are found to have a significant effect on the observed spectra. Nevertheless, wheel-like patterns are still preserved, and it is possible to determine the average peptide til…

Models MolecularMagic angleRotationGaussianLipid BilayersNormal DistributionBiophysicsMolecular physicsProtein Structure SecondarySpectral lineQuantitative Biology::Subcellular ProcessesMolecular dynamicssymbols.namesakeNuclear magnetic resonanceOrientationComputer SimulationLipid bilayerAnisotropyNuclear Magnetic Resonance BiomolecularQuantitative Biology::BiomoleculesChemistryMembranePolarization (waves)AmplitudesymbolsDimyristoylphosphatidylcholinePeptidesBiophysical Journal
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Orientational landscapes of peptides in membranes: prediction of (2)H NMR couplings in a dynamic context.

2009

Unlike soluble proteins, membrane polypeptides face an anisotropic milieu. This imposes restraints on their orientation and provides a reference that makes structure prediction tractable by minimalistic thermodynamic models. Here we use this framework to build orientational distributions of monomeric membrane-bound peptides and to predict their expected solid-state (2)H NMR quadrupolar couplings when labeled at specific side chain positions. Using a complete rigid-body sampling of configurations relative to an implicit lipid membrane, peptide free energy landscapes are calculated. This allows us to obtain probability distributions of the peptide tilt, azimuthal rotation, and depth of membra…

Models MolecularMagnetic Resonance SpectroscopyMembrane FluidityPopulationDegrees of freedom (physics and chemistry)Context (language use)BiochemistryQuantitative Biology::Subcellular ProcessesComputational chemistryOrientation (geometry)Computer SimulationLipid bilayereducationAnisotropyPhysics::Biological PhysicsQuantitative Biology::Biomoleculeseducation.field_of_studyChemistryCell MembraneMaxima and minimaMembraneSolubilityChemical physicsThermodynamicsPeptidesAlgorithmsBiochemistry
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Ion transport and selectivity in nanopores with spatially inhomogeneous fixed charge distributions

2007

Polymeric nanopores with fixed charges show ionic selectivity when immersed in aqueous electrolyte solutions. The understanding of the electrical interaction between these charges and the mobile ions confined in the inside nanopore solution is the key issue in the design of potential applications. The authors have theoretically described the effects that spatially inhomogeneous fixed charge distributions exert on the ionic transport and selectivity properties of the nanopore. A comprehensive set of one-dimensional distributions including the skin, core, cluster, and asymmetric cases are analyzed on the basis of the Nernst-Planck equations. Current-voltage curves, nanopore potentials, and tr…

Models MolecularMaterials scienceStatic ElectricityGeneral Physics and AstronomyIonic bondingNanotechnologyElectrolyteIon ChannelsNanoporous materialsIonQuantitative Biology::Subcellular ProcessesElectrolytesBiopolymersIonic conductivityStatic electricityCluster (physics)Ionic conductivityComputer SimulationPhysical and Theoretical Chemistry:FÍSICA::Química física [UNESCO]AnisotropyIon TransportUNESCO::FÍSICA::Química físicaNanostructuresNanoporeModels ChemicalPolymer solutionsChemical physicsNanoporous materials ; Polymer solutions ; Electrolytes ; Ionic conductivityAnisotropyIon Channel GatingPorosityThe Journal of Chemical Physics
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Field theoretic study of bilayer membrane fusion: I. Hemifusion mechanism

2003

Self-consistent field theory is used to determine structural and energetic properties of metastable intermediates and unstable transition states involved in the standard stalk mechanism of bilayer membrane fusion. A microscopic model of flexible amphiphilic chains dissolved in hydrophilic solvent is employed to describe these self-assembled structures. We find that the barrier to formation of the initial stalk is much smaller than previously estimated by phenomenological theories. Therefore its creation it is not the rate limiting process. The barrier which is relevant is associated with the rather limited radial expansion of the stalk into a hemifusion diaphragm. It is strongly affected by…

Models MolecularMembrane FluidityLipid BilayersStatic ElectricityBiophysicsFOS: Physical sciencesCondensed Matter - Soft Condensed Matter010402 general chemistryCurvatureQuantitative Biology - Quantitative MethodsMembrane Fusion01 natural sciencesQuantitative Biology::Subcellular Processes03 medical and health sciencesElectromagnetic FieldsMetastabilityPhase (matter)Computer SimulationLipid bilayerQuantitative Methods (q-bio.QM)030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesFusionMembranesChemistryBilayerLipid bilayer fusionMembranes Artificial0104 chemical sciencesCrystallographyMembraneModels ChemicalChemical physicsFOS: Biological sciencesSoft Condensed Matter (cond-mat.soft)Porosity
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Molecular Rearrangement of an Aza-Scorpiand Macrocycle Induced by pH: A Computational Study †

2016

Rearrangements and their control are a hot topic in supramolecular chemistry due to the possibilities that these phenomena open in the design of synthetic receptors and molecular machines. Macrocycle aza-scorpiands constitute an interesting system that can reorganize their spatial structure depending on pH variations or the presence of metal cations. In this study, the relative stabilities of these conformations were predicted computationally by semi-empirical and density functional theory approximations, and the reorganization from closed to open conformations was simulated by using the Monte Carlo multiple minimum method Financial support by the Spanish Ministerio de Economía y Competitiv…

Models MolecularMontecarlo Mètode deMonte Carlo method01 natural sciencessupramolecular chemistryMonte Carlo Multiple Minimumlcsh:ChemistryComputational chemistryaza-scorpiandsMolecular rearrangementpH controlled; supramolecular chemistry; synthetic receptors; aza-scorpiands; semi-empirical; Density Functional Theory; Monte Carlo Multiple Minimumlcsh:QH301-705.5semi-empiricalSpectroscopyDensity Functional TheoryDensity functionalsSpatial structureChemistryGeneral MedicineHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationMolecular machineComputer Science ApplicationsMonte Carlo methodpH controlledvisual_artsynthetic receptorsvisual_art.visual_art_mediumDensity functional theoryMonte Carlo MethodMacrocyclic CompoundsSupramolecular chemistry010402 general chemistryQuímica supramolecularCatalysisArticleInorganic ChemistryMetalQuantitative Biology::Subcellular ProcessesPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryMolecular BiologyAza CompoundsFuncional de densitat Teoria del010405 organic chemistryOrganic ChemistryComputational Biology0104 chemical scienceslcsh:Biology (General)lcsh:QD1-999Synthetic ReceptorsQuantum TheorySupramolecular chemistryInternational Journal of Molecular Sciences
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