Ioannis Beis wrote:
Dear gromacs users,

I am trying to center the trajectory of a bilayer in the rectangular simulation box in the frame of my effort to calculate the bilayer thickness with g_dist. According to the visualization, the upper layer of the membrane lies on the lowest part of the box and the lower part of the membrane on the highest part of the box, with the water in the middle. There should not be anything wrong with drifting along the z-axis, since the initial structure was at the very bottom of the box, so even a small drift downwards -due to the pbc- would place the lower part of the membrane on the top of the box.

I tried issuing:

trjconv -f my_trajectory.xtc -s my_initial_structure.gro -o my_trajectory_no_jump.xtc -pbc nojump

with 0 (for system) and subsequently

trjconv -f my_trajectory_no_jump.xtc -s DOPC_1DOG.tpr -o my_trajectory_no_jump_center.xtc -center -boxcenter tric -pbc mol

with 1 (other) for centering and 0 (system) for output.

I used this kind of commands some time ago and they worked fine. Now strangely the bilayer remains around the position that I described in the beginning. Is it possible that the program treats the bilayer separated as it looks in vmd and considers the geometrical center in the middle of the water instead of the middle of the bilayer?


That's exactly what it does.

I tried the -trans flag to translate the bilayer along z-axis near the center and repeated the steps, but the new trajectory wasn't even visible in vmd. In addition, the .gro files generated by trjconv are apparently trajectory files instead of structure files. I don't feel confident about using editconf for operations like translation of a single initial structure, because as far as I understand editconf is a tool meant mostly for setting up systems; thus I was sceptical about messing a structure with editconf that I would later on use together with an .xtc file as input for trjconv. However, trjconv doesn't seem to generate structure output files. I don't understand the meaning of a .gro file as trajectory file since there are already at least 3 file formats for trajectories.


Generally speaking, a trajectory is just a series of coordinates, so you can output it into a number of formats, including .gro and .pdb, among others. You get a chain of coordinate files that may (or may not) end up being useful in some applications.

So how can I bring my bilayer's trajectory in the center of the unit cell for reliable thickness calculation without drifts? Is it possible at the same time to have clear visualization without disturbances? trjconv with -pbc mol still gives rise to lines in the visualization, apparently as a result of atom jumps. Sadly trajectory files cannot be inspected and visualization is quite handy for certain types of feedback in various data analysis-related tasks, so it would be nice if the trajectories used for analysis also look proper in vmd.


I can think of two approaches, the first of which I have used so it should work 
;)

1. Provide a custom index group specifying only a single lipid atom from the end of a hydrocarbon chain and center on it. Therefore, its geometric center has to be the center of the box, and it should bring the rest of the membrane to the (visual) center of the unit cell.

2. Calculate the distance with the trajectory you have now, and subtract it from the z-length (assuming the membrane plane is x-y) of the box (stored in the .edr file).

-Justin

--
========================================

Justin A. Lemkul
Ph.D. Candidate
ICTAS Doctoral Scholar
MILES-IGERT Trainee
Department of Biochemistry
Virginia Tech
Blacksburg, VA
jalemkul[at]vt.edu | (540) 231-9080
http://www.bevanlab.biochem.vt.edu/Pages/Personal/justin

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