Polymer dynamics under tension: Mean first passage time for looping

W Laeremans and AF den Ouden and J Hooyberghs and WG Ellenbroek, PHYSICAL REVIEW E, 111, 025401 (2025).

DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevE.111.025401

This study deals with polymer looping, an important process in many chemical and biological systems. We investigate basic questions on the looping dynamics of a polymer under tension using the freely jointed chain (FJC) model. Previous theoretical approaches to polymer looping under tension have relied on barrier escape methods, which assume local equilibrium, an assumption that may not always hold. As a starting point, we use an analytical expression for the equilibrium looping probability as a function of the number of monomers and applied force, predicting an inverse relationship between looping time and looping probability. Using molecular dynamics simulations, the predictions of this theoretical approach are validated within the numerical precision achieved. We compare our predictions to those of the barrier escape approach by way of a calculation of the mean first passage time (MFPT) for the ends of a polymer to cross. For this purpose, we derive the exact free energy landscape, but the resulting temporal predictions do not agree with the observed inverse scaling. We conclude that the traditional barrier escape approach does not provide satisfactory predictions for polymer looping dynamics and that the inverse scaling with looping probability offers a more reliable alternative.

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