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  4. Molecular dynamics study of tryptophylglycine: A dipeptide nanotube with confined water
 
research article

Molecular dynamics study of tryptophylglycine: A dipeptide nanotube with confined water

Pan, Y. S.
•
Birkedal, H.
•
Pattison, P.  
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2004
The Journal of Physical Chemistry B

To investigate the mechanism of structural changes of a peptide nanotube and water confined inside the channel, the helical peptide tryptophylglycine monohydrate (WG-H2O) was studied by molecular dynamics (MD) simulations using the three-dimension parallel MD program ddgmq (software package) and a consistent force field. Simulations were performed on both the water-containing system and a model system without water molecules. The details of the structural behavior with temperature are investigated for the entire simulated temperature range. Phase transitions were obtained at 115, 245, 270, 3 10, and 3 85 K, due to the contributions of both the peptide and the confined water subsystems. The crystalline, amorphous, liquidlike, liquid, and superheated phases of water were observed in the temperature ranges 40-115, 115-245, 245-310, 310385, and >385 K, respectively. At 300 K, the diffusion constant of the confined water is 0.46 x 10(-5) cm(2) s(-1), a value comparable to that of other peptide nanotubes. The empty peptide system melts at 440 K. Mechanisms of the negative thermal expansion (NTE) along the tube axis were investigated for different temperature ranges. The contraction of the crystalline water (or amorphous water) draws also the tube walls in and leads to NTE below 245 K. The other NTEs appear to be connected to the collapse of the ice network or the solid peptide network between 245 K and room temperature or from 310 to 440 K, respectively.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1021/jp037219v
Web of Science ID

WOS:000221455000046

Author(s)
Pan, Y. S.
Birkedal, H.
Pattison, P.  
Brown, D.
Chapuis, G.  
Date Issued

2004

Published in
The Journal of Physical Chemistry B
Volume

108

Issue

20

Start page

6458

End page

6466

Subjects

assembling organic nanotubes

•

peptide nanotubes

•

carbon nanotubes

•

supercooled water

•

amorphous phases

•

self-diffusion

•

force-fields

•

ice

•

simulation

•

transition

Note

Times Cited: 0 Article English Cited References Count: 54 821iz

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LCR  
Available on Infoscience
March 7, 2006
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/227365
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