posted on 2024-07-08, 12:45authored bySamuel Bertolini, Arnaud Delcorte
Reactive molecular dynamics (MD) simulations were conducted
to
investigate the soft and reactive landing of hyperthermal velocity
proteins transferred to a vacuum using large argon clusters. Experimentally,
the interaction of argon cluster ion beams (Ar1000–5000+) with a target biofilm was previously used in such a
manner to transfer lysozymes onto a collector with the retention of
their bioactivity, paving the way to a new solvent-free method for
complex biosurface nanofabrication. However, the experiments did not
give access to a microscopic view of the interactions needed for their
full understanding, which can be provided by the MD model. Our reactive
force field simulations clarify the landing mechanisms of the lysozymes
and their fragments on collectors with different natures (gold- and
hydrogen-terminated graphite). The results highlight the conditions
of soft and reactive landing on rigid surfaces, the effects of the
protein structure, energy, and incidence angle before landing, and
the adhesion forces with the collector substrate. Many of the obtained
results can be generalized to other soft and reactive landing approaches
used for biomolecules such as electrospray ionization and matrix-assisted
laser desorption ionization.