Coarse-Grained Force Fields for Molecular Simulations

Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations at the atomic scale are a powerful tool to study the structure and dynamics of model biological systems. However, because of their high computational cost, the time and length scales of atomistic simulations are limited. Biologically important processes, such as protein folding, ion channel gating, signal transduction, and membrane remodeling, are difficult to investigate using atomistic simulations. Coarse-graining reduces the computational cost of calculations by reducing the number of degrees of freedom in the model, allowing simulations of larger systems for longer times. In the first part of this chapter we review briefly some of the coarse-grained models available for proteins, focusing on the specific scope of each model. Then we describe in more detail the MARTINI coarse-grained force field, and we illustrate how to set up and run a simulation of a membrane protein using the Gromacs software package. We explain step-by-step the preparation of the protein and the membrane, the insertion of the protein in the membrane, the equilibration of the system, the simulation itself, and the analysis of the trajectory.
Source: Springer protocols feed by Protein Science - Category: Biochemistry Source Type: news