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      Dynamic polarizability of macromolecules for single-molecule optical biosensing

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          Abstract

          The structural dynamics of macromolecules is important for most microbiological processes, from protein folding to the origins of neurodegenerative disorders. Noninvasive measurements of these dynamics are highly challenging. Recently, optical sensors have been shown to allow noninvasive time-resolved measurements of the dynamic polarizability of single-molecules. Here we introduce a method to efficiently predict the dynamic polarizability from the atomic configuration of a given macromolecule. This provides a means to connect the measured dynamic polarizability to the underlying structure of the molecule, and therefore to connect temporal measurements to structural dynamics. To illustrate the methodology we calculate the change in polarizability as a function of time based on conformations extracted from molecular dynamics simulations and using different conformations of motor proteins solved crystalographically. This allows us to quantify the magnitude of the changes in polarizablity due to thermal and functional motions.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          26 May 2021
          Article
          2105.12377
          072e55d4-8700-48ca-b2c6-b150c45d864f

          http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

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          Custom metadata
          13 pages, 7 figures
          physics.bio-ph physics.optics

          Optical materials & Optics,Biophysics
          Optical materials & Optics, Biophysics

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