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Incorporating pH into molecular dynamics simulations is vital for accurately capturing the fully coupled conformational, energetic, and protonation landscape of many systems. The constant-pH molecular dynamics (CpHMD) methodologies represent state-of-the-art approaches to achieve this, with stochastic titration CpHMD (st-CpHMD) currently being one of the most well-developed and validated methods. St-CpHMD is already compatible with both the GROMOS 54A7 and CHARMM 36m force fields, and we extend it here to support the AMBER 14SB force field available in the GROMACS software package. We introduce and validate a minor modification to the official atomic partial charges of ff14SB (to achieve neutralization of the main chain) to render them compatible with st-CpHMD, and we benchmark the final implementation using lysozyme and Staphylococcal nuclease proteins. Although the root-mean-square error (RMSE) values of the predictions for p versus experimental data align closely with those obtained using the other supported force fields, we also identified several challenging cases where the method requires further improvement. AMBER 14SB simulations showed a lower computational cost compared to CHARMM 36m, despite being slightly higher than the GROMOS 54A7 simulations. Our findings also indicate that to further enhance computational speed, future efforts should concentrate on accelerating the PB/MC step. With this extension, we have developed the first CpHMD method implementation compatible with the three most widely used protein force fields, enabling, for the first time, a direct performance comparison among them.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jctc.5c00415 | DOI Listing |
J Chem Theory Comput
July 2025
BioISI─Instituto de Biossistemas e Ciências Integrativas, Departamento de Química e Bioquímica, Faculdade de Ciências, Universidade de Lisboa, Lisboa 1749-016, Portugal.
Incorporating pH into molecular dynamics simulations is vital for accurately capturing the fully coupled conformational, energetic, and protonation landscape of many systems. The constant-pH molecular dynamics (CpHMD) methodologies represent state-of-the-art approaches to achieve this, with stochastic titration CpHMD (st-CpHMD) currently being one of the most well-developed and validated methods. St-CpHMD is already compatible with both the GROMOS 54A7 and CHARMM 36m force fields, and we extend it here to support the AMBER 14SB force field available in the GROMACS software package.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Omega
April 2022
Department of Chemistry, National Tsing Hua University, Hsinchu, 300044, Taiwan.
A two-pronged computational approach was taken to study the promiscuity of the SAM-dependent methyl transferase AtHTMT1 from thale cress with several nucleophiles (Cl, Br, I, NCO, NCS). First, enzyme-free methyl transfer reactions were studied with M05/6-311+G(2d,p) DFT calculations and electrostatic continuum models (PCM/SMD) for various chemical environments. Second, QM/MM MD simulations with semiempirical Hamiltonians (PM7, PM6-D3, AM1, PM6-D3H4) and the AMBER 14SB force field were used to study the enzyme catalyzed reaction .
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chem Theory Comput
April 2022
Wadsworth Center, New York State Department of Health, Empire State Plaza, Albany, New York 12201, United States.
NMR relaxation analysis of the mobile residues in globular proteins is sensitive to the form of the experimentally fitted internal autocorrelation function, which is used to represent that motion. Different order parameter representations can precisely fit the same set of N , , and heteronuclear NOE measurements while yielding significantly divergent predictions of the underlying autocorrelation functions, indicating the insufficiency of these experimental relaxation data for assessing which order parameter representation provides the most physically realistic predictions. Molecular dynamics simulations offer an unparalleled capability for discriminating among different order parameter representations to assess which representation can most accurately model a wide range of physically realistic autocorrelation functions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Comput Chem
April 2022
Theoretical Chemistry Division, Institute of General, Inorganic and Theoretical Chemistry, Center for Chemistry and Biomedicine, University of Innsbruck, Innsbruck, Austria.
Optimized link bond parameters for the C C bond of 22 different capped amino acid model systems have been determined at SCC DFTB/mio (self-consistent charge density functional tight-binding), SCC DFTB/3ob and GFNn-xTB (n = 0, 1, and 2) level in conjunction with the AMBER 99SB, 14SB, and 19B force fields. The resulting parameter sets have been compared to newly calculated reference data obtained via resolution-of-identity 2nd order Møller-Plesset perturbation theory. The data collected in this work suggests that the optimized values in this study provide a more suitable setup of the QM/MM link bonds compared to the use of a single global setting applied to every amino acid fragmented by the QM/MM interface.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chem Inf Model
October 2020
Computational Biomedicine, Institute for Advanced Simulations IAS-5/Institute for Neuroscience and Medicine INM-9, Forschungszentrum Jülich GmbH, 52428 Jülich, Germany.
Human G protein-coupled receptors (hGPCRs) are the most frequent targets of Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved drugs. Structural bioinformatics, along with molecular simulation, can support structure-based drug design targeting hGPCRs. In this context, several years ago, we developed a hybrid molecular mechanics (MM)/coarse-grained (CG) approach to predict ligand poses in low-resolution hGPCR models.
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