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. 1995 Mar;68(3):906–924. doi: 10.1016/S0006-3495(95)80267-5

Sodium in gramicidin: an example of a permion.

R Elber 1, D P Chen 1, D Rojewska 1, R Eisenberg 1
PMCID: PMC1281815  PMID: 7538805

Abstract

The reaction path and free energy profile of Na+ were computed in the interior of the channel protein gramicidin, with the program MOIL. Gramicidin was represented in atomic detail, but surrounding water and lipid molecules were not included. Thus, only short range interactions were investigated. The permeation path of the ion was an irregular spiral, far from a straight line. Permeation cannot be described by motions of a single Na+ ion. The minimal energy path includes significant motion of water and channel atoms as well as motion of the permeating ion. We think of permeation as motion of a permion, a quasi-particle that includes the many body character of the permeation process, comparable with quasi-particles like holes, phonons, and electrons of solid-state physics. Na+ is accompanied by a plug of water molecules, and motions of water, Na+, and the atoms of gramicidin are highly correlated. The permion moves like a linear polymer made of waters and ion linked and moving coherently along a zigzag line, following the reptation mechanism of polymer transport. The effective mass, free energy, and memory kernel (of the integral describing time-dependent friction) of short range interactions were calculated. The effective mass of the permion (properly normalized) is much less than Na+. Friction varies substantially along the path. The free energy profile has two deep minima and several maxima. In certain regions, the dominant motions along the reaction path are those of the channel protein, not the permeating ion: there, ion waits while the other atoms move. At these waiting sites, the permion's motion along the reaction path is a displacement of the atoms of gramicidin that prepare the way for the Na+ ion.

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Selected References

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