738c Retention of the Structural Properties of Cholesterol on the Coarse-Grained Level

Kevin R. Hadley and Clare McCabe. Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Vanderbilt University, Box 1604 Station B, Nashville, TN 37235

Cholesterol is an essential component of biological systems and important to the structure of biological membranes. In order to probe the effects cholesterol has on structure and self-assembly in mixed lipid systems over time scales inaccessible by atomistic simulations, a coarse-grained model for cholesterol has been developed. Typically, in the mapping of cholesterol to the coarse-grained level important molecular features, such as the multi-ring structure and the bumpy face provided by the chiral methyls, are lost. In order to correctly reproduce and predict the structures seen in pure crystalline cholesterol and liquid-crystalline lipid mixtures we believe these features must be retained. To this end, a coarse-grained force field has been developed using the RPM method formulated by Reith, Pütz, and Müller-Plathe [1, 2]. The RPM method allows for the radial distribution function of the coarse-grained molecule to match its atomistic counterpart, and so indirectly matches the structural properties of the coarse-grained model to its atomistic equivalent. Results will be presented for pure and mixed lipid systems and comparisons made to other coarse-graining methods where appropriate.

References

1. Reith D, Pütz M, Müller-Plathe F, "Deriving Effective Mesoscale Potentials from Atomistic Simulations." J Comp Chem, 24: 1624-1636 (2003).

2. Milano G, Goudeau, Müller-Plathe F, "Multicentered Gaussian-Based Potentials for Coarse-Grained Polymer Simulations: Linking Atomistic and Mesoscopic Scales." J Polymer Sci B, 43: 871-885 (2005).