Martin Bertrand
University of Ottawa
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Publication
Featured researches published by Martin Bertrand.
Biophysical Journal | 2015
Tyler N. Shendruk; Martin Bertrand; Hendrick W. de Haan; James L. Harden; Gary W. Slater
Depletion forces play a role in the compaction and decompaction of chromosomal material in simple cells, but it has remained debatable whether they are sufficient to account for chromosomal collapse. We present coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations, which reveal that depletion-induced attraction is sufficient to cause the collapse of a flexible chain of large structural monomers immersed in a bath of smaller depletants. These simulations use an explicit coarse-grained computational model that treats both the supercoiled DNA structural monomers and the smaller protein crowding agents as combinatorial, truncated Lennard-Jones spheres. By presenting a simple theoretical model, we quantitatively cast the action of depletants on supercoiled bacterial DNA as an effective solvent quality. The rapid collapse of the simulated flexible chromosome at the predicted volume fraction of depletants is a continuous phase transition. Additional physical effects to such simple chromosome models, such as enthalpic interactions between structural monomers or chain rigidity, are required if the collapse is to be a first-order phase transition.
Bioinformatics | 2013
Alexandre P. Blanchard; Graeme S. V. McDowell; Nico Valenzuela; Hongbin Xu; Sarah Gelbard; Martin Bertrand; Gary W. Slater; Daniel Figeys; Stephen Fai; Steffany A. L. Bennett
Motivation: Establishing phospholipid identities in large lipidomic datasets is a labour-intensive process. Where genomics and proteomics capitalize on sequence-based signatures, glycerophospholipids lack easily definable molecular fingerprints. Carbon chain length, degree of unsaturation, linkage, and polar head group identity must be calculated from mass to charge (m/z) ratios under defined mass spectrometry (MS) conditions. Given increasing MS sensitivity, many m/z values are not represented in existing prediction engines. To address this need, Visualization and Phospholipid Identification is a web-based application that returns all theoretically possible phospholipids for any m/z value and MS condition. Visualization algorithms produce multiple chemical structure files for each species. Curated lipids detected by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research Training Program in Neurodegenerative Lipidomics are provided as high-resolution structures. Availability: VaLID is available through the Canadian Institutes of Health Research Training Program in Neurodegenerative Lipidomics resources web site at https://www.med.uottawa.ca/lipidomics/resources.html. Contacts: [email protected] Supplementary Information: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2014
Tyler N. Shendruk; Martin Bertrand; James L. Harden; Gary W. Slater; Hendrick W. de Haan
Given the ubiquity of depletion effects in biological and other soft matter systems, it is desirable to have coarse-grained Molecular Dynamics (MD) simulation approaches appropriate for the study of complex systems. This paper examines the use of two common truncated Lennard-Jones (Weeks-Chandler-Andersen (WCA)) potentials to describe a pair of colloidal particles in a thermal bath of depletants. The shifted-WCA model is the steeper of the two repulsive potentials considered, while the combinatorial-WCA model is the softer. It is found that the depletion-induced well depth for the combinatorial-WCA model is significantly deeper than the shifted-WCA model because the resulting overlap of the colloids yields extra accessible volume for depletants. For both shifted- and combinatorial-WCA simulations, the second virial coefficients and pair potentials between colloids are demonstrated to be well approximated by the Morphometric Thermodynamics (MT) model. This agreement suggests that the presence of depletants can be accurately modelled in MD simulations by implicitly including them through simple, analytical MT forms for depletion-induced interactions. Although both WCA potentials are found to be effective generic coarse-grained simulation approaches for studying depletion effects in complicated soft matter systems, combinatorial-WCA is the more efficient approach as depletion effects are enhanced at lower depletant densities. The findings indicate that for soft matter systems that are better modelled by potentials with some compressibility, predictions from hard-sphere systems could greatly underestimate the magnitude of depletion effects at a given depletant density.
ACS Macro Letters | 2015
Tyler N. Shendruk; Martin Bertrand; Gary W. Slater
We present a numerical study of polyelectrolytes electrophoresing in free solution while squeezed by an axisymmetric confinement force transverse to their net displacement. Hybrid multiparticle collision dynamics and molecular dynamics simulations with mean-field finite Debye layers show that even though the polyelectrolyte chains remain “free-draining” their electrophoretic mobility increases with confinement in nanoconfining potential wells. The primary mechanism leading to the increase in mobility above the free-solution value, despite long-range hydrodynamic screening by counterion layers, is the orientation of polymer segments within Debye layers. The observed length dependence of the electrophoretic mobility arises due to secondary effects of counterion condensation related to confinement compactification.
Electrophoresis | 2005
Robert J. Meagher; Jong-In Won; Laurette C. McCormick; Sorin Nedelcu; Martin Bertrand; Jordan L. Bertram; Guy Drouin; Annelise E. Barron; Gary W. Slater
Physical Review E | 2012
Martin Bertrand; Bela Joos
European Physical Journal E | 2007
Martin Bertrand; Gary W. Slater
Physical Review E | 2010
Martin Bertrand; Martin Forget; Bela Joos
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2014
Ben M. Barlow; Martin Bertrand; Bela Joos
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2014
Martin Bertrand; Tyler N. Shendruk; Hendrick W. de Haan; James L. Harden; Gary W. Slater