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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp01kp78gg50w
Title: Theoretical and Computational Studies of Biophysical Phenomena: Mechanical Stability of Proteins, and Origin of Biological Homochirality
Authors: Hatch, Harold
Advisors: Debenedetti, Pablo G
Contributors: Chemical and Biological Engineering Department
Keywords: Biophysics
Computational
Homochirality
Mechanical Stress
Pressure
Subjects: Chemical engineering
Physical chemistry
Issue Date: 2014
Publisher: Princeton, NJ : Princeton University
Abstract: In the first part of this dissertation, we develop a new formalism for computing local mechanical stresses in order to understand the stabilization mechanism of proteins in glassy carbohydrate-water matrices. To our knowledge, this is the first such computation of local mechanical stresses in molecular simulation that accommodates electrostatic lattice sums, many-body interactions and non-planar interfaces. We demonstrate the formalism's usefulness through selected results on ubiquitin and an α-keratin fragment. We find that protein-level normal stresses increase upon vitrification, and that both proteins experience compressive stresses of the order of 100 bar in the glassy state. In the second part of this dissertation, extensive protein folding simulations are used to explore the stability of proteins at negative pressure. Although hot, cold and high pressure denaturation are well characterized, the possibility of negative pressure unfolding has received much less attention. Proteins under negative pressure, however, are important in applications such medical ultrasound, and the survival of biopoloymers in the xylem of vascular plants. We use extensive replica-exchange molecular dynamics (REMD) simulations and thermodynamic analysis to obtain folding/unfolding equilibrium phase diagrams for the miniproteins trp-cage (α-structure, 20-residue), GB1 β-hairpin (β-structure, 16- residue) and AK16 peptide (α-helix, 16 residue). While trp-cage is destabilized by negative pressure, GB1 β-hairpin and AK16 peptide are stabilized by this condition. Finally, an elementary lattice model is formulated to simulate the kinetics of chiral symmetry breaking via autocatalysis and inhibition in a mixture of non-chiral reactants, chiral products and inert solvent. Starting from a chirally unbiased initial state, spontaneous symmetry breaking occurs in spite of equal a priori probability for creating either product enantiomer. The processes of reaction and diffusion are kinetically intertwined in a way leading to competition in the creation of a symmetry-broken outcome. The model exhibits two modes of symmetry breaking: in the absence of inhibition, reactions are predominantly autocatalytic under both reaction control (fast diffusion, slow reaction) or diffusion control (fast reaction, slow diffusion) conditions. In the presence of inhibition, simulations with different system sizes converge to the same transition temperature under reaction control conditions, and in this limit the reactions are predominantly non-autocatalytic.
URI: http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp01kp78gg50w
Alternate format: The Mudd Manuscript Library retains one bound copy of each dissertation. Search for these copies in the library's main catalog
Type of Material: Academic dissertations (Ph.D.)
Language: en
Appears in Collections:Chemical and Biological Engineering

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