Force-induced Elastic Softening and Conformational Transitions in a Polyampholyte Chain
Rakesh Palariya, Sunil P. Singh

TL;DR
This study combines simulations and theory to reveal how electrostatic interactions and charge sequences influence the nonlinear elastic behavior and conformational transitions of polyampholyte chains and IDPs under force.
Contribution
It introduces a theoretical and simulation framework that explains force-induced conformational transitions and elastic softening in polyampholytes, highlighting the role of charge sequence and electrostatic strength.
Findings
Force induces a coil-to-stretch transition in polyampholytes.
Elastic modulus decreases exponentially with force in the softening regime.
Similar nonlinear elasticity observed in coarse-grained models of IDPs.
Abstract
The mechanical response of intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) and polyampholyte (PA) chains is vital for understanding their biological functions and designing functional materials. We investigate the force-extension behavior of a PA chain with distinct charge sequences using molecular dynamics simulations and a theoretical approach based on the generalized random-phase approximation (GRPA). A diblock PA chain under extensional force undergoes a continuous coil-to-stretch transition at weak electrostatic coupling, which sharpens into a globule-coil-like transition at stronger coupling. The GRPA theory quantitatively captures these behaviors, including the sharp conformational transition and its dependence on electrostatic strength. Simulations reveal pronounced hysteresis during the force-extension and relaxation processes. Additionally, the elastic modulus exhibits four regimes:…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMaterial Dynamics and Properties · Advanced Physical and Chemical Molecular Interactions · Electrostatics and Colloid Interactions
