Journal of chemical theory and computation | 2019
Surface Shear Viscosity and Interleaflet Friction from Nonequilibrium Simulations of Lipid Bilayers.
Abstract
Nonequilibrium simulation protocols based on shear deformations are applied to determine the surface viscosity and interleaflet friction of lipid bilayers. At high shear rates a non-Newtonian shear thinning regime is observed, but lower shear rates yield a Newtonian plateau and results that are consistent with equilibrium measurements based on fluctuation dissipation theorems. Application to all-atom bilayers modeled with the CHARMM36 parameter set yields values for the surface viscosity that are consistent with microscopic measurements based on membrane protein diffusion, but are approximately ten times lower than more macroscopic experimental measurements. The interleaflet friction is about ten times lower than experimental measurements. Comparison across different lipids, temperatures, and ternary liquid disordered phase mixtures produces results that are consistent with experimental diffusion constants. Application of the protocol to the liquid-ordered phase fails to yield a Newtonian plateau, suggesting more complex rheology.