4.7 Article

Modeling of biomolecular machines in non-equilibrium steady states

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 155, Issue 23, Pages -

Publisher

AIP Publishing
DOI: 10.1063/5.0070922

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [TRR 146]

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Numerical computations are essential in modern quantitative sciences, with equilibrium statistical mechanics and stochastic thermodynamics providing theoretical frameworks. The development of stochastic thermodynamics for complex systems is crucial for understanding biomolecular dynamics and facing open challenges.
Numerical computations have become a pillar of all modern quantitative sciences. Any computation involves modeling-even if often this step is not made explicit-and any model has to neglect details while still being physically accurate. Equilibrium statistical mechanics guides both the development of models and numerical methods for dynamics obeying detailed balance. For systems driven away from thermal equilibrium, such a universal theoretical framework is missing. For a restricted class of driven systems governed by Markov dynamics and local detailed balance, stochastic thermodynamics has evolved to fill this gap and to provide fundamental constraints and guiding principles. The next step is to advance stochastic thermodynamics from simple model systems to complex systems with tens of thousands or even millions of degrees of freedom. Biomolecules operating in the presence of chemical gradients and mechanical forces are a prime example for this challenge. In this Perspective, we give an introduction to isothermal stochastic thermodynamics geared toward the systematic multiscale modeling of the conformational dynamics of biomolecular and synthetic machines, and we outline some of the open challenges.

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