4.5 Article

Aggregation of Lipid A Variants: A Hybrid Particle-Field Model

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DOI: 10.1016/j.bbagen.2020.129570

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  1. Research Council of Norway through the CoE Hylleraas Centre for Quantum Molecular Sciences [262695]
  2. Brazilian funding agency FACEPE [APQ-0732-1.06/14]
  3. Brazilian funding agency CNPq [INCT-FCx 465259/2014-6]

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The study focuses on developing a coarse-grained model for chemical variants of Lipid A, validating their ability to form stable bilayers in water, and successfully reproducing the phase behavior of Lipid A/counterion/water mixtures.
Lipid A is one of the three components of bacterial lipopolysaccharides constituting the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria, and is recognized to have an important biological role in the inflammatory response of mammalians. Its biological activity is modulated by the number of acyl-chains that are present in the lipid and by the dielectric medium, i.e., the type of counter-ions, through electrostatic interactions. In this paper, we report on a coarse-grained model of chemical variants of Lipid A based on the hybrid particle-field/molecular dynamics approach (hPF-MD). In particular, we investigate the stability of Lipid A bilayers for two different hexa- and tetra-acylated structures. Comparing particle density profiles along bilayer cross-sections, we find good agreement between the hPF-MD model and reference all-atom simulation for both chemical variants of Lipid A. hPF-MD models of constituted bilayers composed by hexa-acylated Lipid A in water are stable within the simulation time. We further validate our model by verifying that the phase behavior of Lipid A/counterion/water mixtures is correctly reproduced. In particular, hPF-MD simulations predict the correct self-assembly of different lamellar and micellar phases from an initially random distribution of Lipid A molecules with counterions in water. Finally, it is possible to observe the spontaneous formation and stability of Lipid A vesicles by fusion of micellar aggregates.

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