Nordita seminar

Extreme coarse grainings: from colloids to biomolecules

by Giuseppe Foffi (Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne)

Europe/Stockholm
122:028

122:028

Description

In this seminar I will review some of the activities of my group. I will introduce the field of soft matter focusing on colloidal systems. I will then briefly describe the “brute” coarse grained (CG) approach of a colloidal physicist with its success and its pitfalls. I will then move to describe three bio-related systems that we are investigating presently: A) Mixtures of eye-lens proteins. I will introduce these mixtures explaining their medical relevance with respect to cataract disease and I will show why they are good candidate to be treated as colloidal systems. I will introduce the model and its validation with experimental results. I will discuss how a fine balance of the interactions controls the stability of the system. Indeed thermodynamic stability is a general phenomenon and the same observation that holds here for the eye-lens proteins could be extended to other systems that could be of potential interest for food science as well as material science [1-4] B) Diffusion-limited absorption in crowded media: Crowding is a crucial factor for reactions occurring in vivo. Nevertheless, biological reactions are usually discussed in the ideal Smoluchowski framework of non-interacting agents. We generalize the classic Smoluchowski problem to arbitrary crowding conditions by means of a novel computational scheme that treats the diffusing particles as hard spheres and allows to efficiently explore the effects of increasing packing on the encounter dynamics. I will discuss the effect of packing on a pure system as well as on binary mixtures. [5-6] C) (Brief!) A CG model for human immunoglobulin (IgG): Immunoglobulins are the soldiers of the immune system. They bind to what they recognize as dangerous for the body facilitating the immune response. We have developed a model for IgG that is based on very simple geometrical assumptions but that reproduces its main feature, namely the presence of highly flexible hinge. The model agrees well with the available experiments. With this model we conducted in-silico binding experiments and we studied the effect of modifying the interactions on the binding process. We show clearly that the flexibility of these macromolecules is indeed fundamental to perform their task [7].

References:
1. Stradner, A., Foffi, G., Dorsaz, N., Thurston, G., Schurtenberger, P. New insight into cataract formation: Enhanced stability through mutual attraction (2007) Physical Review Letters, 99 (19), art. no. 198103
2. Dorsaz, N., Thurston, G.M., Stradner, A., Schurtenberger, P., Foffi, G. Colloidal characterization and thermodynamic stability of binary eye lens protein mixtures (2009) Journal of Physical Chemistry B, 113 (6), pp. 1693-1709.
3. Dorsaz, N., Thurston, G.M., Stradner, A., Schurtenberger, P., Foffi Phase Separation in Binary Eye Lens Protein Mixtures (submitted)
4. Fiocco D, Pastore G, Foffi G Effective Forces in Square Well and Square Shoulder Fluids (to appear on J. Phys. Chem. B) (2010)
5. Dorsaz, N., De Michele, C., Piazza, F., Foffi, G. Inertial effects in diffusion-limited reactions (2010) Journal of Physics Condensed Matter, 22 (10), art. no. 104116
6. Dorsaz, N., De Michele, C., Piazza, F., De Los Rios P., Foffi, G. Diffusion-limited reactions in crowded environments (to appear on Phys. Rev. Lett.) (2010)
7. De Michele, C., Piazza, F., De Los Rios P., Foffi, G. In Silico investigation of Antibody binding to an antigen covered surface (to be submitted)