The
lipophilicity of cholesterol was investigated by using coarse-grained
molecular dynamics and umbrella sampling. The previous coarse-grained
cholesterol models in the literature are more hydrophobic than our
model. The Gibbs free energy of transferring cholesterol from the
octanol phase to water phase (ΔG
o/w) was 11.88 ± 0.08 kcal mol–1, and the octanol–water
partitioning coefficient (logP) was estimated to be 8.72 ± 0.06.
The latter is in agreement with the logP values found by bioinformatics,
which are standard methods to predict the lipophilicity, giving excellent
octanol/water partitioning coefficients compared with experimental
ones for different molecules. We also performed the first experimentally
direct measurement of this important property for cholesterol. The
experimental octanol/water partitioning coefficient of cholesterol
was measured to be 8.86 ± 0.79, which is in excellent agreement
with our calculated logP value from our parametrized coarse-grained
cholesterol model. This shows the significance of systematic optimization
of the lipophilicity for developing coarse-grain models of important
biomolecules with complicated molecular structures and hydrophobic
character like cholesterol.
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