Coil-globule transition for regular, random, and specially designed copolymers: Monte Carlo simulation and self-consistent field theory
- 3 April 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review E
- Vol. 65 (4), 041708
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physreve.65.041708
Abstract
The coil-globule transition has been studied for copolymer chains both by means of lattice Monte Carlo (MC) simulations using bond fluctuation algorithm and by a numerical self-consistent-field (SCF) method. Copolymer chains of fixed length with A and B monomeric units with regular, random, and specially designed (proteinlike) primary sequences have been investigated. The dependence of the transition temperature on the sequence has been analyzed. A proteinlike copolymer is more stable than a copolymer with statistically random sequence. The transition is more sharp for random copolymers. It is found that there exists a temperature below which the chain appears to be in the lowest energy state (ground state). Both for random and proteinlike sequences and for regular copolymers with a relatively long repeating block, a molten globule regime is found between the ground state temperature and the transition temperature. For regular block copolymers the transition temperature increases with block size. Qualitatively, the results from both methods are in agreement. Differences between the methods result from approximations in the SCF theory and equilibration problems in MC simulations. The two methods are thus complementary.
Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- Statistical mechanics of protein-like heteropolymersProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1999
- Conformation-Dependent Sequence Design (Engineering) ofCopolymersPhysical Review Letters, 1999
- Collapse of random copolymersThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1998
- Conformational transitions of heteropolymers in dilute solutionsPhysical Review E, 1998
- Protein-like copolymers: Computer simulationRussian Chemical Bulletin, 1998
- Lattice Monte Carlo investigations on copolymer systems, 3. Alternating and random copolymersMacromolecular Theory and Simulations, 1998
- Protein-like copolymers: computer simulationPhysica A: Statistical Mechanics and its Applications, 1998
- Folding funnels and energy landscapes of larger proteins within the capillarity approximationProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1997
- Theory for the folding and stability of globular proteinsBiochemistry, 1985
- The statistical mechanics of polymers with excluded volumeProceedings of the Physical Society, 1965