Abstract

Proteins often have nonzero electric dipole moments, making them interact with external electric fields and offering a means for controlling their orientation. One application that is known to benefit from orientation control is single-particle imaging with x-ray free-electron lasers, in which diffraction is recorded from proteins in the gas phase to determine their structures. To this point, theoretical investigations into this phenomenon have assumed that the field experienced by the proteins is constant or a perfect step function, whereas any real-world pulse will be smooth. Here, we explore the possibility of orienting gas-phase proteins using time-dependent electric fields. We performed ab initio simulations to estimate the field strength required to break protein bonds, with 45 V/nm as a breaking point value. We then simulated ubiquitin in time-dependent electric fields using classical molecular dynamics. The minimal field strength required for orientation within 10 ns was on the order of 0.5 V/nm. Although high fields can be destructive for the structure, the structures in our simulations were preserved until orientation was achieved regardless of field strength, a principle we denote “orientation before destruction.”

Highlights

  • New means for manipulating macromolecules can be of great utility for both applications and basic research in the physical and life sciences

  • Using classical molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, we recently demonstrated the feasibility of controlling the orientation of gas-phase proteins using a strong electric field (EF) [1]

  • Given the extreme computational effort needed for quantum calculations, we limited the extend of those simulations to comprise only the electronic response, without nuclei dynamics

Read more

Summary

Introduction

New means for manipulating macromolecules can be of great utility for both applications and basic research in the physical and life sciences. The protein backbone is, believed to remain folded on short timescales [9,10], which is supported by a growing mass of evidence from simulations and experiments [9,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19]. Such kinetic trapping of the structures enables delivery of intact gas-phase

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call