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Originally published as Biophys J. BioFAST on October 14, 2005.
doi:10.1529/biophysj.105.066977
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Biophysical Journal 90:101-111 (2006)
© 2006 The Biophysical Society

Extending a Spectrin Repeat Unit. II: Rupture Behavior

Sterling Paramore, Gary S. Ayton and Gregory A. Voth

Center for Biophysical Modeling and Simulation and Department of Chemistry, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah

Correspondence: Address reprint requests to G. A. Voth, Tel.: 801-581-7272; E-mail: voth{at}chem.utah.edu.

A spectrin repeat unit was subject to extension using cyclic expansion nonequilibrium molecular dynamics. Periodic boundary conditions were used to examine the effects of the contiguous {alpha}-helical linker on the force response. The measured force-extension curve shows a linear increase in the force response when the spectrin repeat unit is extended by ~0.4 nm. After that point, the force response peaks and subsequently declines. The peak in the force response marks the point where the spectrin repeat unit undergoes a change in its material properties from a strongly elastic material to a mostly viscous one, on the timescales of the simulations. The force peak is also correlated with rupture of the {alpha}-helical linker, and is likely the event responsible for the peaks in the sawtooth-pattern force-extension curves measured by atomic force microscopy experiments. Rupture of the linker involves simultaneously breaking approximately four hydrogen bonds that maintain the {alpha}-helical linker. After this initial rupture, the linker undergoes simple helix-to-coil transitions as the spectrin repeat unit continues to be extended. The implications of linker rupture in the interpretation of unfolding and atomic force microscopy experiments are also discussed.




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