Exploring the helix-coil transition via all-atom equilibrium ensemble simulations

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Abstract

The ensemble folding of two 21-residue α-helical peptides has been studied using all-atom simulations under several variants of the AMBER potential in explicit solvent using a global distributed computing network. Our extensive sampling, orders of magnitude greater than the experimental folding time, results in complete convergence to ensemble equilibrium. This allows for a quantitative assessment of these potentials, including a new variant of the AMBER-99 force field, denoted AMBER-99φ, which shows improved agreement with experimental kinetic and thermodynamic measurements. From bulk analysis of the simulated AMBER-99φ equilibrium, we find that the folding landscape is pseudo-two-state, with complexity arising from the broad, shallow character of the "native" and "unfolded" regions of the phase space. Each of these macrostates allows for configurational diffusion among a diverse ensemble of conformational microstates with greatly varying helical content and molecular size. Indeed, the observed structural dynamics are better represented as a conformational diffusion than as a simple exponential process, and equilibrium transition rates spanning several orders of magnitude are reported. After multiple nucleation steps, on average, helix formation proceeds via a kinetic "alignment" phase in which two or more short, low-entropy helical segments form a more ideal, single-helix structure. © 2005 by the Biophysical Society.

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Sorin, E. J., & Pande, V. S. (2005). Exploring the helix-coil transition via all-atom equilibrium ensemble simulations. Biophysical Journal, 88(4), 2472–2493. https://doi.org/10.1529/biophysj.104.051938

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