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Rotational dynamics of proteins in nanochannels: Role of solvent's local viscosity.

Navaneeth HaridasanSarith P Sathian
Published in: Nanotechnology (2021)
Viscosity variation of solvent in local regions near a solid surface, be it a biological surface of a protein or an engineered surface of a nanoconfinement, is a direct consequence of intermolecular interactions between the solid body and the solvent. The current coarse-grained molecular dynamics study takes advantage of this phenomenon to investigate the anomaly in a solvated protein's rotational dynamics confined using a representative solid matrix. The concept of persistence time, the characteristic time of structural reordering in liquids, is used to compute the solvent's local viscosity. With an increase in the degree of confinement, the confining matrix significantly influences the solvent molecule's local viscosity present in the protein hydration layer through intermolecular interactions. This effect contributes to the enhanced drag force on protein motion, causing a reduction in the rotational diffusion coefficient. Simulation results suggest that the direct matrix-protein non-bonded interaction is responsible for the occasional jump and discontinuity in orientational motion when the protein is in very tight confinement.
Keyphrases
  • molecular dynamics
  • amino acid
  • ionic liquid
  • binding protein
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • blood brain barrier
  • cross sectional
  • mass spectrometry
  • magnetic resonance
  • quantum dots
  • contrast enhanced