Computer simulations of small molecules in membranes
Insights from computer simulations into the interactions of small molecules with lipid
bilayers
Andrew Pohorille, Michael H. New, Karl Schweighofer and Michael
A. Wilson
Exobiology Branch
NASA Ames Research Center
Moffett Field, CA 94035
and
Dept. of Pharmaceutical Chemistry
University of California, San Francisco
San Francisco, CA 94143
Abstract:
Two of Ernest Overton's lasting contributions to biology are the
Meyer-Overton relationship between the potency of an anesthetic and its solubility in oil,
and the Overton rule which relates the permeability of a membrane to the oil-water
partition coefficient of the permeating molecule. A growing body of experimental evidence,
however, cannot be reconciled with these theories. In particular, the molecular nature of
membranes, unknown to Overton, needs to be included in any description of these phenomena.
Computer simulations are ideally suited for providing atomic-level information about the
behavior of small molecules in membranes. The authors discuss simulation studies relevant
to Overton's ideas. Through simulations it was found that anesthetics tend to concentrate
at interfaces and their anesthetic potency correlates better with solubility at the
water-membrane interface than with solubility in oil. Simulation studies of membrane
permeation revealed the anisotropic nature of the membranes, as evidenced, for example, by
the highly nonuniform distribution of free volume in the bilayer. This, in turn,
influences the diffusion rates of solutes, which increase with the depth in the membrane.
Small solutes tend to move by hopping between voids in the bilayer, and this hopping
motion may be responsible for the deviation from the Overton rule of the permeation rates
of these molecules.

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