Influence of surface interactions on folding and forced unbinding of semiflexible chains

被引:7
作者
Barsegov, V
Thirumalai, A [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Maryland, Inst Phys Sci & Technol, Biophys Program, College Pk, MD 20742 USA
[2] Univ Maryland, Dept Chem & Biochem, College Pk, MD 20742 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1021/jp053803n
中图分类号
O64 [物理化学(理论化学)、化学物理学];
学科分类号
070304 ; 081704 ;
摘要
We have investigated the folding and forced unbinding transitions of adsorbed semiflexible polymer chains using theory and simulations. These processes describe, at an elementary level, a number of biologically relevant phenomena that include adhesive interactions between proteins and tethering of receptors to cell walls. The binding interface is modeled as a solid surface, and the wormlike chain (WLC) is used for the semiflexible chain (SC). Using Langevin simulations, in the overdamped limit we examine the ordering kinetics of racquet-like and toroidal structures in the presence of an attractive interaction between the surface and the polymer chain. For a range of interactions, temperature, and the persistence length, l(p), we obtained the monomer density distribution, n(x), (x is the perpendicular distance of a tagged chain end from the surface) for all of the relevant morphologies. There is a single peak in n(x) inside the range of attractive forces, b, for chains in the extended conformations, whereas in racquet and toroidal structures there is an additional peak at x approximate to b. The simulated results for n(x) are in good agreement with theory. The formation of toroids on the surface appears to be a first-order transition as evidenced by the bimodal distribution in n(x). The theoretical result underestimates the simulated n(x) for x << b and follows n(x) closely for x >= b; the calculated density agrees exactly with n(x) in the range x << b. The chain-surface interaction is probed by subjecting the surface structures to a pulling force, f. The average extension, < x(f)>, as a function of f exhibits a sigmoidal profile with sharp all-or-none transition at the unfolding force threshold f = f(c) which increases for more structured states. Simulated < x(f)> compare well with the theoretical predictions. The critical force, f(c), is a function of l(s)/l(c) for a fixed temperature, where l(c) and l(s) are the length scales that express the strength of the intramolecular and SC-surface attraction, respectively. For a fixed l(s), f(c) increases as l(p) decreases.
引用
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页码:21979 / 21988
页数:10
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