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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Computer Simulations of Heterogenous Biomembranes

Jämbeck, Joakim P. M. January 2014 (has links)
Molecular modeling has come a long way during the past decades and in the current thesis modeling of biological membranes is the focus. The main method of choice has been classical Molecular Dynamics simulations and for this technique a model Hamiltonian, or force field (FF), has been developed for lipids to be used for biological membranes. Further, ways of more accurately simulate the interactions between solutes and membranes have been investigated. A FF coined Slipids was developed and validated against a range of experimental data (Papers I-III). Several structural properties such as area per lipid, scattering form factors and NMR order parameters obtained from the simulations are in good agreement with available experimental data. Further, the compatibility of Slipids with amino acid FFs was proven. This, together with the wide range of lipids that can be studied, makes Slipids an ideal candidate for large-scale studies of biologically relevant systems. A solute's electron distribution is changed as it is transferred from water to a bilayer, a phenomena that cannot be fully captured with fixed-charge FFs.  In Paper IV we propose a scheme of implicitly including these effects with fixed-charge FFs in order to more realistically model water-membrane partitioning. The results are in good agreement with experiments in terms of free energies and further the differences between using this scheme and the more traditional approach were highlighted. The free energy landscape (FEL) of solutes embedded in a model membrane is explored in Paper V. This was done using biased sampling methods with a reaction coordinate that included intramolecular degrees of freedom (DoF). These DoFs were identified in different bulk liquids and then used in studies with bilayers. The FELs describe the conformational changes necessary for the system to follow the lowest free energy path. Besides this, the pitfalls of using a one-dimensional reaction coordinate are highlighted.

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