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Polymer Translocation Induced by a Bad Solvent

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 Added by Aniket Bhattacharya
 Publication date 2010
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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We employ 3D Langevin Dynamics simulations to study the dynamics of polymer chains translocating through a nanopore in presence of asymmetric solvent conditions. Initially a large fraction ($>$ 50%) of the chain is placed at the textit{cis} side in a good solvent while the $trans$ segments are placed in a bad solvent that causes the chain to collapse and promotes translocation from the $cis$ to the $trans$ side. In particular, we study the ratcheting effect of a globule formed at the textit{trans} side created by the translocated segment, and how this ratchet drives the system towards faster translocation. Unlike in the case of unbiased or externally forced translocation where the mean first passage time $langle tau rangle $ is often characterized by algebraic scaling as a function of the chain length $N$ with a single scaling exponent $alpha$, and the histogram of the mean first passage time $P(tau/langletau rangle)$ exhibits scaling, we find that scaling is not well obeyed. For relatively long chains we find $langle tau rangle sim N^alpha$ where $alpha approx 1$ for $varepsilon/k_{B}T > 1$. In this limit, we also find that translocation proceeds with a nearly constant velocity of the individual beads(monomers), which is attributed to the coiling of the globule. We provide an approximate theory assuming rotat ional motion restricted on a 2D disc to demonstrate that there is a crossover from diffusive behavior of the center of mass for short chains to a single file translocation for long chains, where the average translocation time scales linearly with the chain length $N$.



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We study the driven translocation of polymers under time-dependent driving forces using $N$-particle Langevin dynamics simulations. We consider the force to be either sinusoidally oscillating in time or dichotomic noise with exponential correlation time, to mimic both plausible experimental setups and naturally occurring biological conditions. In addition, we consider both the case of purely repulsive polymer-pore interactions and the case with additional attractive polymer-pore interactions, typically occurring inside biological pores. We find that the nature of the interaction fundamentally affects the translocation dynamics. For the non-attractive pore, the translocation time crosses over to a fast translocation regime as the frequency of the driving force decreases. In the attractive pore case, because of a free energy well induced inside the pore, the translocation time can be a minimum at the optimal frequency of the force, the so-called resonant activation. In the latter case, we examine the effect of various physical parameters on the resonant activation, and explain our observations using simple theoretical arguments.
The impact of thermal fluctuations on the translocation dynamics of a polymer chain driven through a narrow pore has been investigated theoretically and by means of extensive Molecular-Dynamics (MD) simulation. The theoretical consideration is based on the so-called velocity Langevin (V-Langevin) equation which determines the progress of the translocation in terms of the number of polymer segments, $s(t)$, that have passed through the pore at time $t$ due to a driving force $f$. The formalism is based only on the assumption that, due to thermal fluctuations, the translocation velocity $v=dot{s}(t)$ is a Gaussian random process as suggested by our MD data. With this in mind we have derived the corresponding Fokker-Planck equation (FPE) which has a nonlinear drift term and diffusion term with a {em time-dependent} diffusion coefficient $D(t)$. Our MD simulation reveals that the driven translocation process follows a {em super}diffusive law with a running diffusion coefficient $D(t) propto t^{gamma}$ where $gamma < 1$. This finding is then used in the numerical solution of the FPE which yields an important result: for comparatively small driving forces fluctuations facilitate the translocation dynamics. As a consequence, the exponent $alpha$ which describes the scaling of the mean translocation time $<tau>$ with the length $N$ of the polymer, $<tau> propto N^{alpha}$ is found to diminish. Thus, taking thermal fluctuations into account, one can explain the systematic discrepancy between theoretically predicted duration of a driven translocation process, considered usually as a deterministic event, and measurements in computer simulations. In the non-driven case, $f=0$, the translocation is slightly subdiffusive and can be treated within the framework of fractional Brownian motion (fBm).
276 - Kaifu Luo , Ralf Metzler 2010
Using two dimensional Langevin dynamics simulations, we investigate the dynamics of polymer translocation into a fluidic channel with diameter $R$ through a nanopore under a driving force $F$. Due to the crowding effect induced by the partially translocated monomers, the translocation dynamics is significantly altered in comparison to an unconfined environment, namely, we observe a nonuniversal dependence of the translocation time $tau$ on the chain length $N$. $tau$ initially decreases rapidly and then saturates with increasing $R$, and a dependence of the scaling exponent $alpha$ of $tau$ with $N$ on the channel width $R$ is observed. The otherwise inverse linear scaling of $tau$ with $F$ breaks down and we observe a minimum of $alpha$ as a function of $F$. These behaviors are interpreted in terms of the waiting time of an individual segment passing through the pore during translocation.
154 - Wancheng Yu , Kaifu Luo 2011
Using Langevin dynamics simulations, we investigate the dynamics of chaperone-assisted translocation of a flexible polymer through a nanopore. We find that increasing the binding energy $epsilon$ between the chaperone and the chain and the chaperone concentration $N_c$ can greatly improve the translocation probability. Particularly, with increasing the chaperone concentration a maximum translocation probability is observed for weak binding. For a fixed chaperone concentration, the histogram of translocation time $tau$ has a transition from long-tailed distribution to Gaussian distribution with increasing $epsilon$. $tau$ rapidly decreases and then almost saturates with increasing binding energy for short chain, however, it has a minimum for longer chains at lower chaperone concentration. We also show that $tau$ has a minimum as a function of the chaperone concentration. For different $epsilon$, a nonuniversal dependence of $tau$ on the chain length $N$ is also observed. These results can be interpreted by characteristic entropic effects for flexible polymers induced by either crowding effect from high chaperone concentration or the intersegmental binding for the high binding energy.
We present a theoretical argument to derive a scaling law between the mean translocation time $tau$ and the chain length $N$ for driven polymer translocation. This scaling law explicitly takes into account the pore-polymer interactions, which appear as a correction term to asymptotic scaling and are responsible for the dominant finite size effects in the process. By eliminating the correction-to-scaling term we introduce a rescaled translocation time and show, by employing both the Brownian Dynamics Tension Propagation theory [Ikonen {it et al.}, Phys. Rev. E {bf 85}, 051803 (2012)] and molecular dynamics simulations that the rescaled exponent reaches the asymptotic limit in a range of chain lengths that is easily accessible to simulations and experiments. The rescaling procedure can also be used to quantitatively estimate the magnitude of the pore-polymer interaction from simulations or experimental data. Finally, we also consider the case of driven translocation with hydrodynamic interactions (HIs). We show that by augmenting the BDTP theory with HIs one reaches a good agreement between the theory and previous simulation results found in the literature. Our results suggest that the scaling relation between $tau$ and $N$ is retained even in this case.
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