4.7 Article

Acceleration of Lateral Equilibration in Mixed Lipid Bilayers Using Replica Exchange with Solute Tempering

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL THEORY AND COMPUTATION
Volume 10, Issue 10, Pages 4264-4272

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ct500305u

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [GM086801]
  2. National Science Foundation [MCB130178, ACI-1053575]
  3. Div Of Molecular and Cellular Bioscience
  4. Direct For Biological Sciences [1050966] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The lateral heterogeneity of cellular membranes plays an important role in many biological functions such as major difficulty in molecular dynamics simulations aimed at components or interactions with membrane proteins. One studying the membrane heterogeneity is that lipids diffuse signaling and regulating membrane proteins. This heterogeneity can result from preferential interactions between membrane slowly and collectively in bilayers, and therefore, it is difficult to reach equilibrium in lateral organization in bilayer mixtures. Here, we propose the use of the replica exchange with solute tempering (REST) approach to accelerate lateral relaxation in heterogeneous bilayers. REST is based on the replica exchange method but tempers only the solute, leaving the temperature of the solvent fixed. Since the number of replicas in REST scales approximately only with the degrees of freedom in REST enables us to enhance the configuration sampling of lipid bilayers with fewer replicas, in comparison with the temperature replica exchange molecular dynamics simulation (T-REMD) where the number of replicas scales with the degrees of freedom of the entire system. We apply the REST method to a cholesterol and 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DPPC) bilayer mixture and find that the lateral distribution functions of all molecular pair types converge much faster than in the standard MD simulation. The relative diffusion rate between molecules in REST is, on average, an order of magnitude faster than in the standard MD simulation. Although REST was initially proposed to study protein folding and its efficiency in protein folding is still under debate, we find a unique application of REST to accelerate lateral equilibration in mixed lipid membranes and suggest a promising way to probe membrane lateral heterogeneity through molecular dynamics simulation. the solute,

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