Mesoscopic Model for Mechanical Characterization of Biological Protein Materials

Authors
Yoon, GwonchanPark, Hyeong-JinNa, SungsooEom, Kilho
Issue Date
2009-04-30
Publisher
WILEY
Citation
JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL CHEMISTRY, v.30, no.6, pp.873 - 880
Abstract
Mechanical characterization of protein molecules has played a role on gaining insight into the biological functions of proteins, because some proteins perform the mechanical function. Here, we present the mesoscopic model of biological protein materials composed of protein crystals prescribed by Go potential for characterization of elastic behavior of protein materials. Specifically, we consider the representative volume element (RVE) containing the protein crystals represented by C-alpha atoms, prescribed by Go potential, with application of constant normal strain to RVE. The stress-strain relationship computed from virial stress theory provides the nonlinear elastic behavior of protein materials and their mechanical properties such as Young's modulus, quantitatively and/or qualitatively comparable with mechanical properties of biological protein materials obtained from experiments and/or atomistic simulations. Further, we discuss the role of native topology on the mechanical properties of protein crystals. It is shown that parallel strands (hydrogen bonds in parallel) enhance the mechanical resilience of protein materials. (C) 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Comput Chem 30: 873-880, 2009
Keywords
TITIN IMMUNOGLOBULIN DOMAINS; SPIDER DRAGLINE SILK; FRACTURE-MECHANICS; TRANSITION-STATE; ELASTICITY; DYNAMICS; STRENGTH; MICROTUBULES; SIMULATION; TOPOLOGY; TITIN IMMUNOGLOBULIN DOMAINS; SPIDER DRAGLINE SILK; FRACTURE-MECHANICS; TRANSITION-STATE; ELASTICITY; DYNAMICS; STRENGTH; MICROTUBULES; SIMULATION; TOPOLOGY; mechanical property; protein crystal; Go model; virial stress; Young' s modulus
ISSN
0192-8651
URI
https://pubs.kist.re.kr/handle/201004/132553
DOI
10.1002/jcc.21107
Appears in Collections:
KIST Article > 2009
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