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1.
PLoS One ; 10(5): e0126420, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25997164

ABSTRACT

Analytical ultracentrifugation (AUC) is a first principles based method to determine absolute sedimentation coefficients and buoyant molar masses of macromolecules and their complexes, reporting on their size and shape in free solution. The purpose of this multi-laboratory study was to establish the precision and accuracy of basic data dimensions in AUC and validate previously proposed calibration techniques. Three kits of AUC cell assemblies containing radial and temperature calibration tools and a bovine serum albumin (BSA) reference sample were shared among 67 laboratories, generating 129 comprehensive data sets. These allowed for an assessment of many parameters of instrument performance, including accuracy of the reported scan time after the start of centrifugation, the accuracy of the temperature calibration, and the accuracy of the radial magnification. The range of sedimentation coefficients obtained for BSA monomer in different instruments and using different optical systems was from 3.655 S to 4.949 S, with a mean and standard deviation of (4.304 ± 0.188) S (4.4%). After the combined application of correction factors derived from the external calibration references for elapsed time, scan velocity, temperature, and radial magnification, the range of s-values was reduced 7-fold with a mean of 4.325 S and a 6-fold reduced standard deviation of ± 0.030 S (0.7%). In addition, the large data set provided an opportunity to determine the instrument-to-instrument variation of the absolute radial positions reported in the scan files, the precision of photometric or refractometric signal magnitudes, and the precision of the calculated apparent molar mass of BSA monomer and the fraction of BSA dimers. These results highlight the necessity and effectiveness of independent calibration of basic AUC data dimensions for reliable quantitative studies.


Subject(s)
Ultracentrifugation/methods , Ultracentrifugation/standards , Calibration , Reproducibility of Results
2.
J Chem Phys ; 135(8): 084116, 2011 Aug 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21895168

ABSTRACT

The hydrodynamic interaction is an essential effect to consider in Brownian dynamics simulations of polymer and nanoparticle dilute solutions. Several mathematical approaches can be used to build Brownian dynamics algorithms with hydrodynamic interaction, the most common of them being the exact but time demanding Cholesky decomposition and the Chebyshev polynomial expansion. Recently, Geyer and Winter [J. Chem. Phys. 130, 1149051 (2009)] have proposed a new approximation to treat the hydrodynamic interaction that seems quite efficient and is increasingly used. So far, a systematic comparison among those approaches has not been clearly made. In this paper, several features and the efficiency of typical implementations of those approaches are evaluated by using bead-and-spring chain models. The different sensitivity to the bead overlap detected for the different implementations may be of interest to select the suitable algorithm for a given simulation.

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