| Literature DB >> 27834427 |
Chanil Jeon1, Youngkyun Jung2, Bae-Yeun Ha3.
Abstract
A chain molecule can be entropically collapsed in a crowded medium in a free or confined space. Here, we present a unified view of how molecular crowding collapses a flexible polymer in three distinct spaces: free, cylindrical, and (two-dimensional) slit-like. Despite their seeming disparities, a few general features characterize all these cases, even though the ϕc-dependence of chain compaction differs between the two cases: a > ac and a < ac, where ϕc is the volume fraction of crowders, a is the monomer size, and ac is the crowder size. For a > ac (applicable to a coarse-grained model of bacterial chromosomes), chain size depends on the ratio aϕc/ac, and "full" compaction occurs universally at aϕc/ac ≈ 1; for ac > a (relevant for protein folding), it is controlled by ϕc alone and crowding has a modest effect on chain size in a cellular environment (ϕc ≈ 0.3). Also for a typical parameter range of biological relevance, molecular crowding can be viewed as effectively reducing the solvent quality, independent of confinement.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27834427 DOI: 10.1039/c6sm01184e
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Soft Matter ISSN: 1744-683X Impact factor: 3.679