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The Geometry of Biomolecular Solvation 2. Electrostatics Patrice Koehl Computer Science and Genome Center

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Presentation on theme: "The Geometry of Biomolecular Solvation 2. Electrostatics Patrice Koehl Computer Science and Genome Center"— Presentation transcript:

1 The Geometry of Biomolecular Solvation 2. Electrostatics Patrice Koehl Computer Science and Genome Center http://www.cs.ucdavis.edu/~koehl/

2 + + Solvation Free Energy W np W sol

3 A Poisson-Boltzmann view of Electrostatics

4 Elementary Electrostatics in vacuo Gauss’s law: The electric flux out of any closed surface is proportional to the total charge enclosed within the surface. Integral form:Differential form: Notes: - for a point charge q at position X 0,  (X)=q  (X-X 0 ) - Coulomb’s law for a charge can be retrieved from Gauss’s law

5 Elementary Electrostatics in vacuo Poisson equation: Laplace equation: (charge density = 0)

6 +- Uniform Dielectric Medium Physical basis of dielectric screening An atom or molecule in an externally imposed electric field develops a non zero net dipole moment: (The magnitude of a dipole is a measure of charge separation) The field generated by these induced dipoles runs against the inducing field the overall field is weakened (Screening effect) The negative charge is screened by a shell of positive charges.

7 Uniform Dielectric Medium Polarization: The dipole moment per unit volume is a vector field known as the polarization vector P(X). In many materials:  is the electric susceptibility, and  is the electric permittivity, or dielectric constant The field from a uniform dipole density is -4  P, therefore the total field is

8 Uniform Dielectric Medium Modified Poisson equation: Energies are scaled by the same factor. For two charges:

9 System with dielectric boundaries The dielectric is no more uniform:  varies, the Poisson equation becomes: If we can solve this equation, we have the potential, from which we can derive most electrostatics properties of the system (Electric field, energy, free energy…) BUT This equation is difficult to solve for a system like a macromolecule!!

10 The Poisson Boltzmann Equation  (X) is the density of charges. For a biological system, it includes the charges of the “solute” (biomolecules), and the charges of free ions in the solvent: The ions distribute themselves in the solvent according to the electrostatic potential (Debye-Huckel theory): The potential  is itself influenced by the redistribution of ion charges, so the potential and concentrations must be solved for self consistency!

11 The Poisson Boltzmann Equation Linearized form: I: ionic strength

12 Analytical solution Only available for a few special simplification of the molecular shape and charge distribution Numerical Solution Mesh generation -- Decompose the physical domain to small elements; Approximate the solution with the potential value at the sampled mesh vertices -- Solve a linear system formed by numerical methods like finite difference and finite element method Mesh size and quality determine the speed and accuracy of the approximation Solving the Poisson Boltzmann Equation

13 Linear Poisson Boltzmann equation: Numerical solution PP ww Space discretized into a cubic lattice. Charges and potentials are defined on grid points. Dielectric defined on grid lines Condition at each grid point: j : indices of the six direct neighbors of i Solve as a large system of linear equations

14 Unstructured mesh have advantages over structured mesh on boundary conformity and adaptivity Smooth surface models for molecules are necessary for unstructured mesh generation Meshes

15 Disadvantages Lack of smoothness Cannot be meshed with good quality An example of the self-intersection of molecular surface Molecular Surface

16 The molecular skin is similar to the molecular surface but uses hyperboloids blend between the spheres representing the atoms It is a smooth surface, free of intersection Comparison between the molecular surface model and the skin model for a protein Molecular Skin

17 The molecular skin surface is the boundary of the union of an infinite family of balls Molecular Skin

18 Skin Mixed complex Computing the skin

19 Skin Decomposition Sphere patches Hyperboloid patches card(X) =1, 4card(X) =2, 3

20 Building a skin mesh Sample points Join the points to form a mesh of triangles

21 A 2D illustration of skin surface meshing algorithm Building a skin mesh

22 Full Delaunay of sampling points Restricted Delaunay defining the skin surface mesh

23 Mesh Quality

24 Triangle quality distribution

25 Delaunay Refinement Insert the circumcenter of the skinny tetrahedron iteratively Volumetric Meshing

26 Example Skin mesh Volumetric mesh

27 Problems with Poisson Boltzmann Dimensionless ions No interactions between ions Uniform solvent concentration Polarization is a linear response to E, with constant proportion No interactions between solvent and ions

28 Modified Poisson Boltzmann Equations Generalized Gauss Equation: Classically, P is set proportional to E. A better model is to assume a density of dipoles, with constant module p o Also assume that both ions and dipoles have a fixed size a

29 with Generalized Poisson-Boltzmann Langevin Equation and


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