4.7 Article

A theoretical study on the stability of CNT encased cyclic peptide beyond hydrogen bond cut-off

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOMOLECULAR STRUCTURE & DYNAMICS
Volume 36, Issue 5, Pages 1108-1117

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/07391102.2017.1312699

Keywords

single-wall carbon nanotube; encasing; cyclic peptide; hydrogen bond; collective variable; free energy; molecular dynamic simulation; MM; PBSA; WCA

Funding

  1. CDAC (CENTRE FOR DEVELOPMENT OF ADVANCED COMPUTING) at Bengaluru, India

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The Carbon nanotubes (CNT) are potential candidate for many biomedical applications especially in targeted drug delivery for cancer diseases. However, the use of CNT has limitations due to its insolubility in aqueous media. The self-assembly of cyclic peptide encased on the CNT has enhanced its dispersion in aqueous medium which extend their applications as antibacterial and drug delivery agents. To understand this process, an attempt has been made to investigate the dynamics and stability of trimer cyclic peptide encasing with CNT using classical molecular dynamics. The model cyclic peptide monomer constitutes 14 series of amino acids viz.; (cyclo-[(D-ARG-L-VAL-D-ARG-L-THR-D-AGR-L-LYS-D-GLY-L-ARG-D-ARG-L-ILE-D-ARG-L-ILE-D-PRO-L-PRO)]). Each cyclic peptide in the assembly stacking far apart at approximately 15 angstrom each other beyond hydrogen bond cut-off distance. The trimer was observed to be stable only over 10ns of entire MD trajectory. But when there is electrostatic interaction between cyclic peptides at 6.5 angstrom distance then assembly is stable for entire 50ns. Our result reveals that for a stable assembly, beyond the hydrogen bond cut-off distance, the electrostatic interaction plays significant role.

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