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1.
J Chem Phys ; 161(3)2024 Jul 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39007368

RESUMO

The Structure and TOpology Replica Molecular Mechanics (STORMM) code is a next-generation molecular simulation engine and associated libraries optimized for performance on fast, vectorized central processor units and graphics processing units (GPUs) with independent memory and tens of thousands of threads. STORMM is built to run thousands of independent molecular mechanical calculations on a single GPU with novel implementations that tune numerical precision, mathematical operations, and scarce on-chip memory resources to optimize throughput. The libraries are built around accessible classes with detailed documentation, supporting fine-grained parallelism and algorithm development as well as copying or swapping groups of systems on and off of the GPU. A primary intention of the STORMM libraries is to provide developers of atomic simulation methods with access to a high-performance molecular mechanics engine with extensive facilities to prototype and develop bespoke tools aimed toward drug discovery applications. In its present state, STORMM delivers molecular dynamics simulations of small molecules and small proteins in implicit solvent with tens to hundreds of times the throughput of conventional codes. The engineering paradigm transforms two of the most memory bandwidth-intensive aspects of condensed-phase dynamics, particle-mesh mapping, and valence interactions, into compute-bound problems for several times the scalability of existing programs. Numerical methods for compressing and streamlining the information present in stored coordinates and lookup tables are also presented, delivering improved accuracy over methods implemented in other molecular dynamics engines. The open-source code is released under the MIT license.

3.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 23(21): 12494, 2021 Jun 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34014244

RESUMO

Correction for 'Histidine protonation controls structural heterogeneity in the cyanobacteriochrome AnPixJg2' by Aditya G. Rao et al., Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2021, DOI: 10.1039/d0cp05314g.

4.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 23(12): 7359-7367, 2021 Mar 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33876095

RESUMO

Cyanobacteriochromes are compact and spectrally diverse photoreceptor proteins that bind a linear tetrapyrrole as a chromophore. They show photochromicity by having two stable states that can be interconverted by the photoisomerization of the chromophore. These photochemical properties make them an attractive target for biotechnological applications. However, their application is impeded by structural heterogeneity that reduces the yield of the photoconversion. The heterogeneity can originate either from the chromophore structure or the protein environment. Here, we study the origin of the heterogeneity in AnPixJg2, a representative member of the red/green cyanobacteriochrome family, that has a red absorbing parental state and a green absorbing photoproduct state. Using molecular dynamics simulations and umbrella sampling we have identified the protonation state of a conserved histidine residue as a trigger for structural heterogeneity. When the histidine is in a neutral form, the chromophore structure is homogenous, while in a positively charged form, the chromophore is heterogeneous with two different conformations. We have identified a correlation between the protonation of the histidine and the structural heterogeneity of the chromophore by detailed characterization of the interactions in the protein binding site. Our findings reconcile seemingly contradicting spectroscopic studies that attribute the heterogeneity to different sources. Furthermore, we predict that circular dichroism can be used as a diagnostic tool to distinguish different substates.


Assuntos
Proteínas de Bactérias/metabolismo , Cianobactérias/química , Histidina/metabolismo , Proteínas de Bactérias/química , Cianobactérias/metabolismo , Teoria da Densidade Funcional , Histidina/química , Modelos Moleculares , Estrutura Molecular , Prótons
5.
J Chem Phys ; 153(6): 064101, 2020 Aug 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35287464

RESUMO

We present a new force field, AMBER ff15ipq-m, for simulations of protein mimetics in applications from therapeutics to biomaterials. This force field is an expansion of the AMBER ff15ipq force field that was developed for canonical proteins and enables the modeling of four classes of artificial backbone units that are commonly used alongside natural α residues in blended or "heterogeneous" backbones: chirality-reversed D-α-residues, the Cα-methylated α-residue Aib, homologated ß-residues (ß3) bearing proteinogenic side chains, and two cyclic ß residues (ßcyc; APC and ACPC). The ff15ipq-m force field includes 472 unique atomic charges and 148 unique torsion terms. Consistent with the AMBER IPolQ lineage of force fields, the charges were derived using the Implicitly Polarized Charge (IPolQ) scheme in the presence of explicit solvent. To our knowledge, no general force field reported to date models the combination of artificial building blocks examined here. In addition, we have derived Karplus coefficients for the calculation of backbone amide J-coupling constants for ß3Ala and ACPC ß residues. The AMBER ff15ipq-m force field reproduces experimentally observed J-coupling constants in simple tetrapeptides and maintains the expected conformational propensities in reported structures of proteins/peptides containing the artificial building blocks of interest-all on the µs timescale. These encouraging results demonstrate the power and robustness of the IPolQ lineage of force fields in modeling the structure and dynamics of natural proteins as well as mimetics with protein-inspired artificial backbones in atomic detail.

6.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31662799

RESUMO

The structures of biological macromolecules would not be known to their present extent without X-ray crystallography. Most simulations of globular proteins in solution begin by surrounding the crystal structure of the monomer in a bath of water molecules, but the standard simulation employing periodic boundary conditions is already close to a crystal lattice environment. With simple protocols, the same software and molecular models can perform simulations of the crystal lattice, including all asymmetric units and solvent to fill the box. Throughout the history of molecular dynamics, studies of crystal lattices have served to investigate the quality of the underlying force fields, correlate the simulated ensembles to experimental structure factors, and extrapolate the behavior in lattices to behavior in solution. Powerful new computers are enabling molecular simulations with greater realism and statistical convergence. Meanwhile, the advent of exciting new methods in crystallography, including femtosecond free-electron lasers and image reconstruction for time-resolved crystallography on slurries of small crystals, is expanding the range of structures accessible to X-ray diffraction. We review past fusions of simulations and crystallography, then look ahead to the ways that simulations of crystal structures will enhance structural biology in the future.

7.
J Chem Theory Comput ; 15(8): 4699-4707, 2019 Aug 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31314523

RESUMO

We present a fast implementation of the nudged elastic band (NEB) method into the particle mesh Ewald molecular dynamics module of the Amber software package for both central processing units (CPU) and graphics processing units (GPU). The accuracy of the new implementation has been validated for three cases: a conformational change of alanine dipeptide, the α-helix to ß-sheet transition in polyalanine, and a large conformational transition in the human 8-oxoguanine-DNA glycosylase with DNA complex (OGG1-DNA). Timing benchmark tests were performed on the explicitly solvated OGG1-DNA system containing ∼50 000 atoms. The GPU-optimized implementation of NEB achieves a more than two orders of magnitude speedup compared with the previous CPU implementation performed with a two-core CPU processor. The speed and scalable features of this implementation will enable NEB applications on larger and more complex systems.


Assuntos
DNA Glicosilases/química , Dipeptídeos/química , Simulação de Dinâmica Molecular , Peptídeos/química , Gráficos por Computador , DNA/química , Humanos , Conformação Proteica , Conformação Proteica em alfa-Hélice , Conformação Proteica em Folha beta , Software , Fatores de Tempo
8.
J Chem Inf Model ; 58(10): 2043-2050, 2018 10 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30199633

RESUMO

We report progress in graphics processing unit (GPU)-accelerated molecular dynamics and free energy methods in Amber18. Of particular interest is the development of alchemical free energy algorithms, including free energy perturbation and thermodynamic integration methods with support for nonlinear soft-core potential and parameter interpolation transformation pathways. These methods can be used in conjunction with enhanced sampling techniques such as replica exchange, constant-pH molecular dynamics, and new 12-6-4 potentials for metal ions. Additional performance enhancements have been made that enable appreciable speed-up on GPUs relative to the previous software release.


Assuntos
Simulação de Dinâmica Molecular , Software , Algoritmos , Gráficos por Computador , Concentração de Íons de Hidrogênio , Termodinâmica
9.
J Chem Phys ; 147(16): 161730, 2017 Oct 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29096508

RESUMO

The ff15ipq protein force field is a fixed charge model built by automated tools based on the two charge sets of the implicitly polarized charge method: one set (appropriate for vacuum) for deriving bonded parameters and the other (appropriate for aqueous solution) for running simulations. The duality is intended to treat water-induced electronic polarization with an understanding that fitting data for bonded parameters will come from quantum mechanical calculations in the gas phase. In this study, we compare ff15ipq to two alternatives produced with the same fitting software and a further expanded data set but following more conventional methods for tailoring bonded parameters (harmonic angle terms and torsion potentials) to the charge model. First, ff15ipq-Qsolv derives bonded parameters in the context of the ff15ipq solution phase charge set. Second, ff15ipq-Vac takes ff15ipq's bonded parameters and runs simulations with the vacuum phase charge set used to derive those parameters. The IPolQ charge model and associated protocol for deriving bonded parameters are shown to be an incremental improvement over protocols that do not account for the material phases of each source of their fitting data. Both force fields incorporating the polarized charge set depict stable globular proteins and have varying degrees of success modeling the metastability of short (5-19 residues) peptides. In this particular case, ff15ipq-Qsolv increases stability in a number of α-helices, correctly obtaining 70% helical character in the K19 system at 275 K and showing appropriately diminishing content up to 325 K, but overestimating the helical fraction of AAQAA3 by 50% or more, forming long-lived α-helices in simulations of a ß-hairpin, and increasing the likelihood that the disordered p53 N-terminal peptide will also form a helix. This may indicate a systematic bias imparted by the ff15ipq-Qsolv parameter development strategy, which has the hallmarks of strategies used to develop other popular force fields, and may explain some of the need for manual corrections in this force fields' evolution. In contrast, ff15ipq-Vac incorrectly depicts globular protein unfolding in numerous systems tested, including Trp cage, villin, lysozyme, and GB3, and does not perform any better than ff15ipq or ff15ipq-Qsolv in tests on short peptides. We analyze the free energy surfaces of individual amino acid dipeptides and the electrostatic potential energy surfaces of each charge model to explain the differences.


Assuntos
Oligopeptídeos/química , Proteínas/química , Simulação de Dinâmica Molecular , Ressonância Magnética Nuclear Biomolecular , Estrutura Secundária de Proteína , Termodinâmica
10.
J Comput Aided Mol Des ; 31(1): 47-60, 2017 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27699553

RESUMO

We review our performance in the SAMPL5 challenge for predicting host-guest binding affinities using the movable type (MT) method. The challenge included three hosts, acyclic Cucurbit[2]uril and two octa-acids with and without methylation at the entrance to their binding cavities. Each host was associated with 6-10 guest molecules. The MT method extrapolates local energy landscapes around particular molecular states and estimates the free energy by Monte Carlo integration over these landscapes. Two blind submissions pairing MT with variants of the KECSA potential function yielded mean unsigned errors of 1.26 and 1.53 kcal/mol for the non-methylated octa-acid, 2.83 and 3.06 kcal/mol for the methylated octa-acid, and 2.77 and 3.36 kcal/mol for Cucurbit[2]uril host. While our results are in reasonable agreement with experiment, we focused on particular cases in which our estimates gave incorrect results, particularly with regard to association between the octa-acids and an adamantane derivative. Working on the hypothesis that differential solvation effects play a role in effecting computed binding affinities for the parent octa-acid and the methylated octa-acid and that the ligands bind inside the pockets (rather than on the surface) we devised a new solvent accessible surface area term to better quantify solvation energy contributions in MT based studies. To further explore this issue a, molecular dynamics potential of mean force (PMF) study indicates that, as found by our docking calculations, the stable binding mode for this ligand is inside (rather than surface bound) the octa-acid cavity whether the entrance is methylated or not. The PMF studies also obtained the correct order for the methylation-induced change in binding affinities and associated the difference, to a large extent to differential solvation effects. Overall, the SAMPL5 challenge yielded in improvements our solvation modeling and also demonstrated the need for thorough validation of input data integrity prior to any computational analysis.


Assuntos
Ligantes , Compostos Macrocíclicos/química , Simulação de Dinâmica Molecular , Proteínas/química , Sítios de Ligação , Interações Hidrofóbicas e Hidrofílicas , Conformação Molecular , Estrutura Molecular , Ligação Proteica , Solventes , Termodinâmica
11.
J Chem Theory Comput ; 12(8): 3926-47, 2016 Aug 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27399642

RESUMO

We present the AMBER ff15ipq force field for proteins, the second-generation force field developed using the Implicitly Polarized Q (IPolQ) scheme for deriving implicitly polarized atomic charges in the presence of explicit solvent. The ff15ipq force field is a complete rederivation including more than 300 unique atomic charges, 900 unique torsion terms, 60 new angle parameters, and new atomic radii for polar hydrogens. The atomic charges were derived in the context of the SPC/Eb water model, which yields more-accurate rotational diffusion of proteins and enables direct calculation of nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) relaxation parameters from molecular dynamics simulations. The atomic radii improve the accuracy of modeling salt bridge interactions relative to contemporary fixed-charge force fields, rectifying a limitation of ff14ipq that resulted from its use of pair-specific Lennard-Jones radii. In addition, ff15ipq reproduces penta-alanine J-coupling constants exceptionally well, gives reasonable agreement with NMR relaxation rates, and maintains the expected conformational propensities of structured proteins/peptides, as well as disordered peptides-all on the microsecond (µs) time scale, which is a critical regime for drug design applications. These encouraging results demonstrate the power and robustness of our automated methods for deriving new force fields. All parameters described here and the mdgx program used to fit them are included in the AmberTools16 distribution.

12.
J Chem Theory Comput ; 12(1): 281-96, 2016 Jan 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26584231

RESUMO

The parametrization and validation of the OPLS3 force field for small molecules and proteins are reported. Enhancements with respect to the previous version (OPLS2.1) include the addition of off-atom charge sites to represent halogen bonding and aryl nitrogen lone pairs as well as a complete refit of peptide dihedral parameters to better model the native structure of proteins. To adequately cover medicinal chemical space, OPLS3 employs over an order of magnitude more reference data and associated parameter types relative to other commonly used small molecule force fields (e.g., MMFF and OPLS_2005). As a consequence, OPLS3 achieves a high level of accuracy across performance benchmarks that assess small molecule conformational propensities and solvation. The newly fitted peptide dihedrals lead to significant improvements in the representation of secondary structure elements in simulated peptides and native structure stability over a number of proteins. Together, the improvements made to both the small molecule and protein force field lead to a high level of accuracy in predicting protein-ligand binding measured over a wide range of targets and ligands (less than 1 kcal/mol RMS error) representing a 30% improvement over earlier variants of the OPLS force field.


Assuntos
Algoritmos , Proteínas/química , Bibliotecas de Moléculas Pequenas/química , Quinase 2 Dependente de Ciclina/química , Quinase 2 Dependente de Ciclina/metabolismo , Ligantes , Modelos Moleculares , Peptídeos/química , Ligação Proteica , Estrutura Secundária de Proteína , Proteínas/metabolismo , Teoria Quântica , Bibliotecas de Moléculas Pequenas/metabolismo , Termodinâmica
13.
J Chem Theory Comput ; 10(10): 4515-4534, 2014 Oct 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25328495

RESUMO

We present the ff14ipq force field, implementing the previously published IPolQ charge set for simulations of complete proteins. Minor modifications to the charge derivation scheme and van der Waals interactions between polar atoms are introduced. Torsion parameters are developed through a generational learning approach, based on gas-phase MP2/cc-pVTZ single-point energies computed of structures optimized by the force field itself rather than the quantum benchmark. In this manner, we sacrifice information about the true quantum minima in order to ensure that the force field maintains optimal agreement with the MP2/cc-pVTZ benchmark for the ensembles it will actually produce in simulations. A means of making the gas-phase torsion parameters compatible with solution-phase IPolQ charges is presented. The ff14ipq model is an alternative to ff99SB and other Amber force fields for protein simulations in programs that accommodate pair-specific Lennard-Jones combining rules. The force field gives strong performance on α-helical and ß-sheet oligopeptides as well as globular proteins over microsecond time scale simulations, although it has not yet been tested in conjunction with lipid and nucleic acid models. We show how our choices in parameter development influence the resulting force field and how other choices that may have appeared reasonable would actually have led to poorer results. The tools we developed may also aid in the development of future fixed-charge and even polarizable biomolecular force fields.

14.
J Am Chem Soc ; 135(21): 7938-48, 2013 May 29.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23631449

RESUMO

Molecular dynamics simulations of biomolecular crystals at atomic resolution have the potential to recover information on dynamics and heterogeneity hidden in X-ray diffraction data. We present here 9.6 µs of dynamics in a small helical peptide crystal with 36 independent copies of the unit cell. The average simulation structure agrees with experiment to within 0.28 Å backbone and 0.42 Å all-atom RMSD; a model refined against the average simulation density agrees with the experimental structure to within 0.20 Å backbone and 0.33 Å all-atom RMSD. The R-factor between the experimental structure factors and those derived from this unrestrained simulation is 23% to 1.0 Å resolution. The B-factors for most heavy atoms agree well with experiment (Pearson correlation of 0.90), but B-factors obtained by refinement against the average simulation density underestimate the coordinate fluctuations in the underlying simulation where the simulation samples alternate conformations. A dynamic flow of water molecules through channels within the crystal lattice is observed, yet the average water density is in remarkable agreement with experiment. A minor population of unit cells is characterized by reduced water content, 310 helical propensity and a gauche(-) side-chain rotamer for one of the valine residues. Careful examination of the experimental data suggests that transitions of the helices are a simulation artifact, although there is indeed evidence for alternate valine conformers and variable water content. This study highlights the potential for crystal simulations to detect dynamics and heterogeneity in experimental diffraction data as well as to validate computational chemistry methods.


Assuntos
Peptídeos/química , Cristalografia por Raios X , Simulação de Dinâmica Molecular
15.
J Phys Chem B ; 117(8): 2328-38, 2013 Feb 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23379664

RESUMO

We have developed the IPolQ method for fitting nonpolarizable point charges to implicitly represent the energy of polarization for systems in pure water. The method involves iterative cycles of molecular dynamics simulations to estimate the water charge density around the solute of interest, followed by quantum mechanical calculations at the MP2/cc-pV(T+d)Z level to determine updated solute charges. Lennard-Jones parameters are updated starting from the Amber FF99SB nonbonded parameter set to accommodate the new charge model, guided by the comparisons to experimental hydration free energies (HFEs) of neutral amino acid side chain analogs and assumptions about the computed HFEs for charged side chains. These Lennard-Jones parameter adjustments for side-chain analogs are assumed to be transferable to amino acids generally, and new charges for all standard amino acids are then derived in the presence of water modeled by TIP4P-Ew. Overall, the new charges depict substantially more polarized amino acids, particularly in the backbone moieties, than previous Amber charge sets. Efforts to complete a new force field with appropriate torsion parameters for this charge model are underway. The IPolQ method is general and applicable to arbitrary solutes.


Assuntos
Aminoácidos/química , Água/química , Simulação de Dinâmica Molecular , Teoria Quântica , Termodinâmica
16.
J Comput Aided Mol Des ; 26(5): 551-62, 2012 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22198475

RESUMO

Hydration free energy calculations have become important tests of force fields. Alchemical free energy calculations based on molecular dynamics simulations provide a rigorous way to calculate these free energies for a particular force field, given sufficient sampling. Here, we report results of alchemical hydration free energy calculations for the set of small molecules comprising the 2011 Statistical Assessment of Modeling of Proteins and Ligands challenge. Our calculations are largely based on the Generalized Amber Force Field with several different charge models, and we achieved RMS errors in the 1.4-2.2 kcal/mol range depending on charge model, marginally higher than what we typically observed in previous studies (Mobley et al. in J Phys Chem B 111(9):2242-2254, 2007, J Chem Theory Comput 5(2):350-358, 2009, J Phys Chem B 115:1329-1332, 2011; Nicholls et al. in J Med Chem 51:769-779, 2008; Klimovich and Mobley in J Comput Aided Mol Design 24(4):307-316, 2010). The test set consists of ethane, biphenyl, and a dibenzyl dioxin, as well as a series of chlorinated derivatives of each. We found that, for this set, using high-quality partial charges from MP2/cc-PVTZ SCRF RESP fits provided marginally improved agreement with experiment over using AM1-BCC partial charges as we have more typically done, in keeping with our recent findings (Mobley et al. in J Phys Chem B 115:1329-1332, 2011). Switching to OPLS Lennard-Jones parameters with AM1-BCC charges also improves agreement with experiment. We also find a number of chemical trends within each molecular series which we can explain, but there are also some surprises, including some that are captured by the calculations and some that are not.


Assuntos
Modelos Químicos , Simulação de Dinâmica Molecular , Proteínas/química , Termodinâmica , Entropia , Ligantes , Teoria Quântica , Água/química
17.
Biochemistry ; 51(2): 597-607, 2012 Jan 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22145986

RESUMO

We report a point mutation in the second contact shell of the high-affinity streptavidin-biotin complex that appears to reduce binding affinity through transmitted effects on equilibrium dynamics. The Y54F streptavidin mutation causes a 75-fold loss of binding affinity with 73-fold faster dissociation, a large loss of binding enthalpy (ΔΔH = 3.4 kcal/mol at 37 °C), and a small gain in binding entropy (TΔΔS = 0.7 kcal/mol). The removed Y54 hydroxyl is replaced by a water molecule in the bound structure, but there are no observable changes in structure in the first contact shell and no additional changes surrounding the mutation. Molecular dynamics simulations reveal a large increase in the atomic fluctuation amplitudes for W79, a key biotin contact residue, compared to the fluctuation amplitudes in the wild-type. The increased W79 atomic fluctuation amplitudes are caused by loss of water-mediated hydrogen bonds between the Y54 hydroxyl group and peptide backbone atoms in and near W79. We propose that the increased atomic fluctuation amplitudes diminish the integrity of the W79-biotin interaction and represents a loosening of the "tryptophan collar" that is critical to the slow dissociation and high affinity of streptavidin-biotin binding. These results illustrate how changes in protein dynamics distal to the ligand binding pocket can have a profound impact on ligand binding, even when equilibrium structure is unperturbed.


Assuntos
Biotina/metabolismo , Proteínas Mutantes/química , Proteínas Mutantes/metabolismo , Mutação Puntual , Estreptavidina/química , Estreptavidina/metabolismo , Sítios de Ligação , Cristalografia por Raios X , Cinética , Simulação de Dinâmica Molecular , Proteínas Mutantes/genética , Ligação Proteica , Conformação Proteica , Estreptavidina/genética , Termodinâmica
18.
J Phys Chem B ; 114(40): 12811-24, 2010 Oct 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20860388

RESUMO

We use classical molecular dynamics and 16 combinations of force fields and water models to simulate a protein crystal observed by room-temperature X-ray diffraction. The high resolution of the diffraction data (0.96 Å) and the simplicity of the crystallization solution (nearly pure water) make it possible to attribute any inconsistencies between the crystal structure and our simulations to artifacts of the models rather than inadequate representation of the crystal environment or uncertainty in the experiment. All simulations were extended for 100 ns of production dynamics, permitting some long-time scale artifacts of each model to emerge. The most noticeable effect of these artifacts is a model-dependent drift in the unit cell dimensions, which can become as large as 5% in certain force fields; the underlying cause is the replacement of native crystallographic contacts with non-native ones, which can occur with heterogeneity (loss of crystallographic symmetry) in simulations with some force fields. We find that the AMBER FF99SB force field maintains a lattice structure nearest that seen in the X-ray data, and produces the most realistic atomic fluctuations (by comparison to crystallographic B-factors) of all the models tested. We find that the choice of water model has a minor effect in comparison to the choice of protein model. We also identify a number of artifacts that occur throughout all of the simulations: excessive formation of hydrogen bonds or salt bridges between polar groups and loss of hydrophobic interactions. This study is intended as a foundation for future work that will identify individual parameters in each molecular model that can be modified to improve their representations of protein structure and thermodynamics.


Assuntos
Cristalografia por Raios X , Simulação de Dinâmica Molecular , Proteínas/química , Água/química , Ligação de Hidrogênio
19.
Biochemistry ; 49(22): 4568-70, 2010 Jun 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20462252

RESUMO

We have identified a distal point mutation in streptavidin that causes a 1000-fold reduction in biotin binding affinity without disrupting the equilibrium complex structure. The F130L mutation creates a small cavity occupied by a water molecule; however, all neighboring side chain positions are preserved, and protein-biotin hydrogen bonds are unperturbed. Molecular dynamics simulations reveal a reduced mobility of biotin binding residues but no observable destabilization of protein-ligand interactions. Our combined structural and computational studies suggest that the additional water molecule may affect binding affinity through an electronic polarization effect that impacts the highly cooperative hydrogen bonding network in the biotin binding pocket.


Assuntos
Biotina/química , Elétrons , Simulação de Dinâmica Molecular , Mutação Puntual , Estreptavidina/química , Estreptavidina/metabolismo , Sítios de Ligação/genética , Biotina/antagonistas & inibidores , Biotina/metabolismo , Ligação de Hidrogênio , Leucina/química , Leucina/genética , Leucina/metabolismo , Ligantes , Fenilalanina/química , Fenilalanina/genética , Fenilalanina/metabolismo , Ligação Proteica/genética , Estabilidade Proteica , Estreptavidina/antagonistas & inibidores , Estreptavidina/genética , Termodinâmica
20.
J Chem Theory Comput ; 6(2): 443-58, 2010.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22039358

RESUMO

We present a new method for decomposing the one convolution required by standard Particle-Particle Particle-Mesh (P(3)M) electrostatic methods into a series of convolutions over slab-shaped subregions of the original simulation cell. Most of the convolutions derive data from separate regions of the cell and can thus be computed independently via FFTs, in some cases with a small amount of zero padding so that the results of these sub-problems may be reunited with minimal error. A single convolution over the entire cell is also performed, but using a much coarser mesh than the original problem would have required. This "Multi-Level Ewald" (MLE) method therefore requires moderately more FFT work plus the tasks of interpolating between different sizes of mesh and accumulating the results from neighboring sub-problems, but we show that the added expense can be less than 10% of the total simulation cost. We implement MLE as an approximation to the Smooth Particle Mesh Ewald (SPME) style of P(3)M, and identify a number of tunable parameters in MLE. With reasonable settings pertaining to the degree of overlap between the various sub-problems and the accuracy of interpolation between meshes, the errors obtained by MLE can be smaller than those obtained in molecular simulations with typical SPME settings. We compare simulations of a box of water molecules performed with MLE and SPME, and show that the energy conservation, structural, and dynamical properties of the system are more affected by the accuracy of the SPME calculation itself than by the additional MLE approximation. We anticipate that the MLE method's ability to break a single convolution into many independent sub-problems will be useful for extending the parallel scaling of molecular simulations.

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