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Department of Chemistry and Center for Computational Medicine and Biology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan
Correspondence: Address reprint requests to I. Andricioaei, E-mail: andricio{at}umich.edu.
Mechanical forces play a key role in crucial cellular processes involving force-bearing biomolecules, as well as in novel single-molecule pulling experiments. We present an exact method that enables one to extrapolate, to low (or zero) forces, entire time-correlation functions and kinetic rate constants from the conformational dynamics either simulated numerically or measured experimentally at a single, relatively higher, external force. The method has twofold relevance: 1), to extrapolate the kinetics at physiological force conditions from molecular dynamics trajectories generated at higher forces that accelerate conformational transitions; and 2), to extrapolate unfolding rates from experimental force-extension single-molecule curves. The theoretical formalism, based on stochastic path integral weights of Langevin trajectories, is presented for the constant-force, constant loading rate, and constant-velocity modes of the pulling experiments. For the first relevance, applications are described for simulating the conformational isomerization of alanine dipeptide; and for the second relevance, the single-molecule pulling of RNA is considered. The ability to assign a weight to each trace in the single-molecule data also suggests a means to quantitatively compare unfolding pathways under different conditions.
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