A van der Waals density functional mapping of attraction in DNA dimers
Elisa Londero, Per Hyldgaard, Elsebeth Schroder

TL;DR
This study uses van der Waals density functional theory to map the attraction between DNA dimers, revealing how structural motifs influence vdW interactions and comparing results with atom-based models.
Contribution
It introduces a vdW-DF computational strategy for large biomolecular systems, focusing on interaction geometry surveys and highlighting the role of DNA structural motifs in vdW interactions.
Findings
vdW attraction varies with rotation and structure
DNA strands can be approximated as cylindrical at large distances
Differences between electron-based and atom-based vdW descriptions at short range
Abstract
The dispersion interaction between a pair of parallel DNA double-helix structures is investigated by means of the van der Waals density functional (vdW-DF) method. Each double-helix structure consists of an infinite repetition of one B-DNA coil with 10 base pairs. This parameter-free density functional theory (DFT) study illustrates the initial step in a proposed vdW-DF computational strategy for large biomolecular problems. The strategy is to first perform a survey of interaction geometries, based on the evaluation of the van der Waals (vdW) attraction, and then limit the evaluation of the remaining DFT parts (specifically the expensive study of the kinetic-energy repulsion) to the thus identified interesting geometries. Possibilities for accelerating this second step is detailed in a separate study. For the B-DNA dimer, the variation in van der Waals attraction is explored at…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDNA and Nucleic Acid Chemistry
