Abstract

The ability to separate proteins is desirable for many fields of study, and nanoporous membranes may offer a method for rapid protein filtration at high throughput volume, provided there is an understanding of the protein dynamics involved. In this work, we use Brownian dynamics simulations to study the motion of coarse-grained proteins insulin and ubiquitin in an electrically biased membrane. In our model, the protein is subjected to various biases applied to the silicon membrane equipped with a nanopore of different radii. The time each protein takes to find a cylindrical nanopore embedded in a thin silicon membrane, attempt to translocate it (waiting time), and successfully translocate it in a single attempt (translocation time) is calculated. We observe insulin finding the nanopore and translocating it faster than the electrically neutral ubiquitin due to insulin's slightly smaller size and net negative charge. While ubiquitin's dynamics is also affected by the size of the pore, surprisingly, its translocation process is also noticeably changed by the membrane bias. By investigating the protein's multipole moments, we demonstrate that this behavior is largely due to the protein's dipole and quadrupole interactions with the membrane potential.

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