6 results on '"Aderik Voorspoels"'
Search Results
2. Rigid Base Biasing in Molecular Dynamics Enables Enhanced Sampling of DNA Conformations
- Author
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Aderik Voorspoels, Jocelyne Vreede, and Enrico Carlon
- Subjects
Statistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech) ,Quantitative Biology - Biomolecules ,FOS: Biological sciences ,Soft Condensed Matter (cond-mat.soft) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Biomolecules (q-bio.BM) ,Condensed Matter - Soft Condensed Matter ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Condensed Matter - Statistical Mechanics ,Computer Science Applications - Abstract
All-atom simulations have become increasingly popular to study conformational and dynamical properties of nucleic acids as they are accurate and provide high spatial and time resolutions. This high resolution however comes at a heavy computational cost and within the time scales of simulations nucleic acids weakly fluctuate around their ideal structure exploring a limited set of conformations. We introduce the RBB-NA algorithm which is capable of controlling rigid base parameters in all-atom simulations of Nucleic Acids. With suitable biasing potentials this algorithm can "force" a DNA or RNA molecule to assume specific values of the six rotational (tilt, roll, twist, buckle, propeller, opening) and/or the six translational parameters (shift, slide, rise, shear, stretch, stagger). The algorithm enables the use of advanced sampling techniques to probe the structure and dynamics of locally strongly deformed Nucleic Acids. We illustrate its performance showing some examples in which DNA is strongly twisted, bent or locally buckled. In these examples RBB-NA reproduces well the unconstrained simulations data and other known features of DNA mechanics, but it also allows one to explore the anharmonic behavior characterizing the mechanics of nucleic acids in the high deformation regime., 12 pages, 6 figures
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. PlyAB Nanopores Detect Single Amino Acid Differences in Folded Haemoglobin from Blood
- Author
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Gang Huang, Aderik Voorspoels, Roderick Corstiaan Abraham Versloot, Nieck Jordy van der Heide, Enrico Carlon, Kherim Willems, Giovanni Maglia, and Chemical Biology 1
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Realtime ,Ion Transport ,Science & Technology ,PROTEINS ,Chemistry, Multidisciplinary ,Molecular Modelling ,General Chemistry ,General Medicine ,Molecular Dynamics Simulation ,ELECTROPHORESIS ,Catalysis ,Haemoglobin Variants ,Hemoglobins ,Nanopores ,Chemistry ,Protein Dynamics ,REAL-TIME DETECTION ,MOLECULES ,Biosensors ,SIZE ,Physical Sciences ,Amino Acids ,HPLC ,AFFINITY - Abstract
The real-time identification of protein biomarkers is crucial for the development of point-of-care and portable devices. Here, we use a PlyAB biological nanopore to detect haemoglobin (Hb) variants. Adult haemoglobin (HbA) and sickle cell anaemia haemoglobin (HbS), which differ by just one amino acid, were distinguished in a mixture with more than 97 % accuracy based on individual blockades. Foetal Hb, which shows a larger sequence variation, was distinguished with near 100 % accuracy. Continuum and Brownian dynamics simulations revealed that Hb occupies two energy minima, one near the inner constriction and one at the trans entry of the nanopore. Thermal fluctuations, the charge of the protein, and the external bias influence the dynamics of Hb within the nanopore, which in turn generates the unique ionic current signal in the Hb variants. Finally, Hb was counted from blood samples, demonstrating that direct discrimination and quantification of Hb from blood using nanopores, is feasible. ispartof: ANGEWANDTE CHEMIE-INTERNATIONAL EDITION vol:61 issue:34 ispartof: location:Germany status: published
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Mechanical properties of nucleic acids and the non-local twistable wormlike chain model
- Author
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Midas Segers, Aderik Voorspoels, Takahiro Sakaue, and Enrico Carlon
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Models, Molecular ,Polymers ,General Physics and Astronomy ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Physics, Atomic, Molecular & Chemical ,Nucleic Acids ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Condensed Matter - Statistical Mechanics ,Quantitative Biology::Biomolecules ,Science & Technology ,Statistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech) ,Chemistry, Physical ,Physics ,ELASTICITY ,Biomolecules (q-bio.BM) ,RIGIDITY ,DNA ,FLUCTUATIONS ,Quantitative Biology::Genomics ,Elasticity ,Chemistry ,Quantitative Biology - Biomolecules ,MOLECULAR-DYNAMICS ,FOS: Biological sciences ,Physical Sciences ,SIMULATION ,FORCE-FIELD ,Nucleic Acid Conformation ,RNA - Abstract
Mechanical properties of nucleic acids play an important role in many biological processes which often involve physical deformations of these molecules. At sufficiently long length scales (say above $\sim 20-30$ base pairs) the mechanics of DNA and RNA double helices is described by a homogeneous Twistable Wormlike Chain (TWLC), a semiflexible polymer model characterized by twist and bending stiffnesses. At shorter scales this model breaks down for two reasons: the elastic properties become sequence-dependent and the mechanical deformations at distal sites gets coupled. We discuss in this paper the origin of the latter effect using the framework of a non-local Twistable Wormlike Chain (nlTWLC). We show, by comparing all-atom simulations data for DNA and RNA double helices, that the non-local couplings are of very similar nature in these two molecules: couplings between distal sites are strong for tilt and twist degrees of freedom and weak for roll. We introduce and analyze a simple double-stranded polymer model which clarifies the origin of this universal distal couplings behavior. In this model, referred to as the ladder model, a nlTWLC description emerges from the coarsening of local (atomic) degrees of freedom into angular variables which describe the twist and bending of the molecule. Differently from its local counterpart, the nlTWLC is characterized by a length-scale-dependent elasticity. Our analysis predicts that nucleic acids are mechanically softer at the scale of a few base pairs and are asymptotically stiffer at longer length scales, a behavior which matches experimental data., Comment: 14 pages, 12 figures
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- 2022
5. Comment on 'Flexibility of short DNA helices with finite-length effect: From base pairs to tens of base pairs' [J. Chem. Phys. 142, 125103 (2015)]
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Enrico Skoruppa, Jan A. Stevens, Aderik Voorspoels, Enrico Carlon, Merijn Vangilbergen, and Midas Segers
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Persistence length ,Physics ,Flexibility (anatomy) ,Base pair ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Length effect ,DNA ,Protein Structure, Secondary ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Chain (algebraic topology) ,medicine ,Empirical formula ,Nucleic Acid Conformation ,Statistical physics ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Base Pairing - Abstract
While analyzing the persistence length of DNA atomistic simulations Wu et al. [J. Chem. Phys. 142, 125103 (2015)] introduced an empirical formula to account for the observed length-dependence. In particular they found that the persistence length increases with the distance. Here, we derive the formula by Wu et al. using a non-local twistable wormlike chain which introduces couplings between distal sites. Finally, we show that the same formula can account for the length-scale dependence of the torsional persistence length and is, in fact, applicable to any kind of polymer model with non-local couplings.
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- 2021
6. Length scale dependent elasticity in DNA from coarse-grained and all-atom models
- Author
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Aderik Voorspoels, Enrico Carlon, Enrico Skoruppa, and Jocelyne Vreede
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Physics ,Length scale ,Quantitative Biology::Biomolecules ,Base pair ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Biomolecules (q-bio.BM) ,DNA ,Molecular Dynamics Simulation ,Condensed Matter - Soft Condensed Matter ,01 natural sciences ,Elasticity ,010305 fluids & plasmas ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Quantitative Biology - Biomolecules ,FOS: Biological sciences ,0103 physical sciences ,Soft Condensed Matter (cond-mat.soft) ,Statistical physics ,DNA Conformations ,Elasticity (economics) ,Twist ,010306 general physics ,Base Pairing - Abstract
The mechanical properties of DNA are typically described by elastic theories with purely local couplings (on-site models). We discuss and analyze coarse-grained (oxDNA) and all-atom simulations, which indicate that in DNA distal sites are coupled. Hence, off-site models provide a more realistic description of the mechanics of the double helix. We show that off-site interactions are responsible for a length scale dependence of the elasticity, and we develop an analytical framework to estimate bending and torsional persistence lengths in models including these interactions. Our simulations indicate that off-site couplings are particularly strong for certain degrees of freedom, while they are very weak for others. If stiffness parameters obtained from DNA data are used, the theory predicts large length scale dependent effects for torsional fluctuations and a modest effect in bending fluctuations, which is in agreement with experiments., 16 pages, 9 figures; video abstract at https://youtu.be/8FUdFw8IbuY
- Published
- 2020
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