Fenley Andrew T, Muddana Hari S, Gilson Michael K
Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, California, 92093, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2014 Dec 11;9(12):e113119. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0113119. eCollection 2014.
Many biomolecules have machine-like functions, and accordingly are discussed in terms of mechanical properties like force and motion. However, the concept of stress, a mechanical property that is of fundamental importance in the study of macroscopic mechanics, is not commonly applied in the biomolecular context. We anticipate that microscopical stress analyses of biomolecules and nanomaterials will provide useful mechanistic insights and help guide molecular design. To enable such applications, we have developed Calculator of Atomistic Mechanical Stress (CAMS), an open-source software package for computing atomic resolution stresses from molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. The software also enables decomposition of stress into contributions from bonded, nonbonded and Generalized Born potential terms. CAMS reads GROMACS topology and trajectory files, which are easily generated from AMBER files as well; and time-varying stresses may be animated and visualized in the VMD viewer. Here, we review relevant theory and present illustrative applications.
许多生物分子具有类似机器的功能,因此会从诸如力和运动等机械性能方面进行讨论。然而,应力这一在宏观力学研究中至关重要的机械性能概念,在生物分子领域并不常用。我们预计,对生物分子和纳米材料进行微观应力分析将提供有用的机理见解,并有助于指导分子设计。为实现此类应用,我们开发了原子机械应力计算器(CAMS),这是一个用于从分子动力学(MD)模拟中计算原子分辨率应力的开源软件包。该软件还能将应力分解为键合、非键合和广义玻恩势项的贡献。CAMS读取GROMACS拓扑和轨迹文件,这些文件也很容易从AMBER文件生成;随时间变化的应力可以在VMD查看器中进行动画演示和可视化。在此,我们回顾相关理论并展示一些示例应用。