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1.
A computational approach, which involves the combination of the OPLS force field and molecular orbital MNDO , AM 1, and PM 3 methods, has been developed to describe the effects of a large, molecular mechanically simulated environment on the Hamiltonian of a quantum chemical system. To test the validity of the combined quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical (QM /MM ) potential, a systematic study of the structures and energies of neutral and charged hydrogen-bonded complexes has been carried out, including comparisons with pure semiempirical calculations and available experimental and ab initio data. It is shown that, in many cases, the hybrid QM /MM potential behaves better than do related MNDO /M , AM 1, and PM 3 methods. As a case in point, the draw-back of AM 1 favoring bifurcated H-bonded structures over single ones is not presented in the combined AM 1/OPLS scheme. Possible ways of improvement of the combined QM /MM potential are discussed. © 1992 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

2.
To overcome the limitation of conventional docking methods which assume fixed charge model from force field parameters, combined quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics (QM/MM) method has been applied to docking as a variable charge model and shown to exhibit improvement on the docking accuracy over fixed charge based methods. However, it has also been shown that there are a number of examples for which adoption of variable‐charge model fails to reproduce the native binding modes. In particular, for metalloproteins, previously implemented method of QM/MM docking failed most often. This class of proteins has highly polarized binding sites at which high‐coordinate‐numbered metal ions reside. We extend the QM/MM docking method so that protein atoms surrounding the binding site along with metal ions are included as quantum region, as opposed to only ligand atoms. This extension facilitates the required scaling of partial charges on metal ions leading to prediction of correct binding modes in metalloproteins. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Comput Chem, 2009  相似文献   

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A quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics (QM/MM) implementation that uses the Gaussian electrostatic model (GEM) as the MM force field is presented. GEM relies on the reproduction of electronic density by using auxiliary basis sets to calculate each component of the intermolecular interaction. This hybrid method has been used, along with a conventional QM/MM (point charges) method, to determine the polarization on the QM subsystem by the MM environment in QM/MM calculations on 10 individual H(2)O dimers and a Mg(2+)-H(2)O dimer. We observe that GEM gives the correct polarization response in cases when the MM fragment has a small charge, while the point charges produce significant over-polarization of the QM subsystem and in several cases present an opposite sign for the polarization contribution. In the case when a large charge is located in the MM subsystem, for example, the Mg(2+) ion, the opposite is observed at small distances. However, this is overcome by the use of a damped Hermite charge, which provides the correct polarization response.  相似文献   

5.
Combined ab initio quantum mechanical and molecular mechanical calculations have been widely used for modeling chemical reactions in complex systems such as enzymes, with most applications being based on the determination of a minimum energy path connecting the reactant through the transition state to the product in the enzyme environment. However, statistical mechanics sampling and reaction dynamics calculations with a combined ab initio quantum mechanical (QM) and molecular mechanical (MM) potential are still not feasible because of the computational costs associated mainly with the ab initio quantum mechanical calculations for the QM subsystem. To address this issue, a reaction path potential energy surface is developed here for statistical mechanics and dynamics simulation of chemical reactions in enzymes and other complex systems. The reaction path potential follows the ideas from the reaction path Hamiltonian of Miller, Handy and Adams for gas phase chemical reactions but is designed specifically for large systems that are described with combined ab initio quantum mechanical and molecular mechanical methods. The reaction path potential is an analytical energy expression of the combined quantum mechanical and molecular mechanical potential energy along the minimum energy path. An expansion around the minimum energy path is made in both the nuclear and the electronic degrees of freedom for the QM subsystem internal energy, while the energy of the subsystem described with MM remains unchanged from that in the combined quantum mechanical and molecular mechanical expression and the electrostatic interaction between the QM and MM subsystems is described as the interaction of the MM charges with the QM charges. The QM charges are polarizable in response to the changes in both the MM and the QM degrees of freedom through a new response kernel developed in the present work. The input data for constructing the reaction path potential are energies, vibrational frequencies, and electron density response properties of the QM subsystem along the minimum energy path, all of which can be obtained from the combined quantum mechanical and molecular mechanical calculations. Once constructed, it costs much less for its evaluation. Thus, the reaction path potential provides a potential energy surface for rigorous statistical mechanics and reaction dynamics calculations of complex systems. As an example, the method is applied to the statistical mechanical calculations for the potential of mean force of the chemical reaction in triosephosphate isomerase.  相似文献   

6.
We present an alternative approach to determine "density-dependent property"-derived charges for molecules in the condensed phase. In the case of a solution, it is essential to take into consideration the electron polarization of molecules in the active site of this system. The solute and solvent molecules in this site have to be described by a quantum mechanical technique and the others are allowed to be treated by a molecular mechanical method (QM/MM scheme). For calculations based on this scheme, using the forces and interaction energy as density-dependent property our charges from interaction energy and forces (CHIEF) approach can provide the atom-centered charges on the solute atoms. These charges reproduce well the electrostatic potentials around the solvent molecules and present properly the picture of the electron density of the QM subsystem in the solution system. Thus, the CHIEF charges can be considered as the atomic charges under the conditions of the QM/MM simulation, and then enable one to analyze electrostatic interactions between atoms in the QM and MM regions. This approach would give a view of the QM nuclei and electrons different from the conventional methods.  相似文献   

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Recently, based on the principle of electronic chemical potential equalization and the principle of charge conservation, we proposed a flexible-boundary scheme that allows both partial charge transfer and self-consistent polarization between the quantum mechanical (QM) and molecular mechanical (MM) subsystems in QM/MM calculations; the scheme was applied to study the atomic charges in selected ion–solvent complexes. In the present contribution, we further extend the flexible-boundary treatment to handle the QM/MM boundary passing through covalent bonds. We find that the flexible-boundary redistributed charge and dipole schemes yield reasonable agreement with full-QM calculations for a number of molecular ions and amino acids with charged side chains. Using the full-QM results as reference, the mean unsigned deviations are computed to be 0.06 e for atomic partial charges of the QM atoms, 0.11 e for the amounts of charge transfer between the QM and MM subsystems, and 0.016 Å for the lengths of the covalent bonds that directly connect the QM and MM subsystems. The results indicate the importance of accounting for partial charge transfer across the QM/MM boundary when the QM subsystems are charged.  相似文献   

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Various quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical (QM/MM) geometry optimizations starting from an x-ray crystal structure and from the snapshot structures of constrained molecular dynamics (MD) simulations have been performed to characterize two dynamically stable active site structures of phosphodiesterase-5 (PDE5) in solution. The only difference between the two PDE5 structures exists in the catalytic, second bridging ligand (BL2) which is HO- or H2O. It has been shown that, whereas BL2 (i.e. HO-) in the PDE5(BL2 = HO-) structure can really bridge the two positively charged metal ions (Zn2+ and Mg2+), BL2 (i.e. H2O) in the PDE5(BL2 = H2O) structure can only coordinate Mg2+. It has been demonstrated that the results of the QM/MM geometry optimizations are remarkably affected by the solvent water molecules, the dynamics of the protein environment, and the electronic embedding charges of the MM region in the QM part of the QMM/MM calculation. The PDE5(BL2 = H2O) geometries optimized by using the QM/MM method in different ways show strong couplings between these important factors. It is interesting to note that the PDE5(BL2 = HO-) and PDE5(BL2 = H2O) geometries determined by the QM/MM calculations neglecting these three factors are all consistent with the corresponding geometries determined by the QM/MM calculations that account for all of these three factors. These results suggest the overall effects of these three important factors on the optimized geometries can roughly cancel out. However, the QM/MM calculations that only account for some of these factors could lead to considerably different geometries. These results might be useful also in guiding future QM/MM geometry optimizations on other enzymes.  相似文献   

11.
We report a combined quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical (QM/MM) study on the mechanism of the enzymatic Baeyer-Villiger reaction catalyzed by cyclohexanone monooxygenase (CHMO). In QM/MM geometry optimizations and reaction path calculations, density functional theory (B3LYP/TZVP) is used to describe the QM region consisting of the substrate (cyclohexanone), the isoalloxazine ring of C4a-peroxyflavin, the side chain of Arg-329, and the nicotinamide ring and the adjacent ribose of NADP(+), while the remainder of the enzyme is represented by the CHARMM force field. QM/MM molecular dynamics simulations and free energy calculations at the semiempirical OM3/CHARMM level employ the same QM/MM partitioning. According to the QM/MM calculations, the enzyme-reactant complex contains an anionic deprotonated C4a-peroxyflavin that is stabilized by strong hydrogen bonds with the Arg-329 residue and the NADP(+) cofactor. The CHMO-catalyzed reaction proceeds via a Criegee intermediate having pronounced anionic character. The initial addition reaction has to overcome an energy barrier of about 9 kcal/mol. The formed Criegee intermediate occupies a shallow minimum on the QM/MM potential energy surface and can undergo fragmentation to the lactone product by surmounting a second energy barrier of about 7 kcal/mol. The transition state for the latter migration step is the highest point on the QM/MM energy profile. Gas-phase reoptimizations of the QM region lead to higher barriers and confirm the crucial role of the Arg-329 residue and the NADP(+) cofactor for the catalytic efficiency of CHMO. QM/MM calculations for the CHMO-catalyzed oxidation of 4-methylcyclohexanone reproduce and rationalize the experimentally observed (S)-enantioselectivity for this substrate, which is governed by the conformational preferences of the corresponding Criegee intermediate and the subsequent transition state for the migration step.  相似文献   

12.
The quantum chemistry polarizable force field program (QuanPol) is implemented to perform combined quantum mechanical and molecular mechanical (QM/MM) calculations with induced dipole polarizable force fields and induced surface charge continuum solvation models. The QM methods include Hartree–Fock method, density functional theory method (DFT), generalized valence bond theory method, multiconfiguration self‐consistent field method, Møller–Plesset perturbation theory method, and time‐dependent DFT method. The induced dipoles of the MM atoms and the induced surface charges of the continuum solvation model are self‐consistently and variationally determined together with the QM wavefunction. The MM force field methods can be user specified, or a standard force field such as MMFF94, Chemistry at Harvard Molecular Mechanics (CHARMM), Assisted Model Building with Energy Refinement (AMBER), and Optimized Potentials for Liquid Simulations‐All Atom (OPLS‐AA). Analytic gradients for all of these methods are implemented so geometry optimization and molecular dynamics (MD) simulation can be performed. MD free energy perturbation and umbrella sampling methods are also implemented. © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

13.
We performed geometry optimizations using the tuned and balanced redistributed charge algorithms to treat the QM-MM boundary in combined quantum mechanical and molecular mechanical (QM/MM) methods. In the tuned and balanced redistributed charge (TBRC) scheme, the QM boundary atom is terminated by a tuned F link atom, and the charge of the MM boundary atom is properly adjusted to conserve the total charge of the entire QM/MM system; then the adjusted MM boundary charge is moved evenly to the midpoints of the bonds between the MM boundary atom and its neighboring MM atoms. In the tuned and balanced redistributed charge-2 (TBRC2) scheme, the adjusted MM boundary charge is moved evenly to all MM atoms that are attached to the MM boundary atom. A new option, namely charge smearing, has been added to the TBRC scheme, yielding the tuned and balanced smeared redistributed charge (TBSRC) scheme. In the new scheme, the redistributed charges near the QM-MM boundary are smeared to make the electrostatic interactions between the QM region and the redistributed charges more realistic. The TBRC2 scheme and new TBSRC scheme have been tested for various kinds of bonds at a QM-MM boundary, including C-C, C-N, C-O, O-C, N-C, C-S, S-S, S-C, C-Si, and O-N bonds. Charge smearing is necessary if the redistributed charges are close to the QM region, as in the TBSRC scheme, but not if the redistributed charge is farther from the QM region, as in the TBRC2 scheme. We found that QM/MM results using either the TBRC2 scheme or the TBSRC scheme agree well with full QM results; the mean unsigned error (MUE) of the QM/MM deprotonation energy is 1.6 kcal/mol in both cases, and the MUE of QM/MM optimized bond lengths over the three bonds closest to the QM-MM boundary, with errors averaged over the protonated forms and unprotonated forms, is 0.015 ? for TBRC2 and 0.021 ? for TBSRC. The improvements in the new scheme are essential for QM-MM boundaries that pass through a polar bond, but even for boundaries that pass through C-C bonds, the improvement can be quite significant.  相似文献   

14.
 Hybrid quantum mechanical (QM)/molecular mechanical (MM) calculations are used to study two aspects of enzyme catalysis, Kinetic isotope effects associated with the hydride ion transfer step in the reduction of benzyl alcohol by liver alcohol dehydrogenase are studied by employing variational transition-state theory and optimised multidimensional tunnelling. With the smaller QM region, described at the Hartree–Fock ab initio level, together with a parameterised zinc atom charge, good agreement with experiment is obtained. A comparison is made with the proton transfer in methylamine dehydrogenase. The origin of the large range in pharmacological activity shown by a series of α-ketoheterocycle inhibitors of the serine protease, elastase, is investigated by both force field and QM/MM calculations. Both models point to two different inhibition mechanisms being operative. Initial QM/MM calculations suggest that these are binding, and reaction to form a tetrahedral intermediate, the latter process occurring for only the more potent set of inhibitors. Recieved 3 October 2001 / Accepted: 6 September 2002 / Published online: 31 January 2003 Contribution to the Proceedings of the Symposium on Combined QM/MM Methods at the 222nd National Meeting of the American Chemical Society, 2001 Correspondence to: I. H. Hillier Acknowledgements. We thank EPSRC and BBSRC for support of the research and D.G. Truhlar for the use of the POLYRATE code.  相似文献   

15.
A new formalism for quantum mechanical / molecular mechanical (QM/MM) dynamics of chemical species in solution has been developed, which does not require the construction of any other potential functions except those for solvent–solvent interactions, maintains all the advantages of large simulation boxes and ensures the accuracy of ab initio quantum mechanics for all forces acting in the chemically most relevant region. Interactions between solute and more distant solvent molecules are incorporated by a dynamically adjusted force field corresponding to the actual molecular configuration of the simulated system and charges derived from the electron distribution in the solvate. The new formalism has been tested with some examples of hydrated ions, for which accurate conventional ab initio QM/MM simulations have been previously performed, and the comparison shows equivalence and in some aspects superiority of the new method. As this simulation procedure does not require any tedious construction of two-and three-body interaction potentials inherent to conventional QM/MM approaches, it opens the straightforward access to ab initio molecular dynamics simulations of any kind of solutes, such as metal complexes and other composite species in solution.  相似文献   

16.
The pentacoordinated ferric and ferrous cytochrome P450(cam) complexes have been investigated by combined quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical (QM/MM) calculations in the presence of a protein/solvent environment and by QM calculations on the isolated QM regions with use of density functional theory. The B3LYP functional has been found more reliable than the BLYP and BHLYP functionals for estimating the relative state energies. The B3LYP/CHARMM calculations with an all-electron basis set for iron give high-spin ground states for the title complexes, in agreement with experiment. The comparison of the B3LYP/CHARMM results of the entire protein system with the B3LYP calculations on the naked QM regions shows that the amount of stabilization by the protein environment is largest for the intermediate-spin states, followed by the high-spin states of the complexes. The calculation of M?ssbauer parameters in the presence of the enzyme environment confirms the double occupation of the d(xz) orbital in the quintet spin state of the ferrous complex, consistent with the computed QM/MM energies in the enzyme environment, while the d(x)2(-)(y)2 orbital is doubly occupied in the gas-phase quintet state.  相似文献   

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The performance of semiempirical molecular-orbital methods--MNDO, MNDO-d, AM1, RM1, PM3 and PM6--in describing halogen bonding was evaluated, and the results were compared with molecular mechanical (MM) and quantum mechanical (QM) data. Three types of performance were assessed: (1) geometrical optimizations and binding energy calculations for 27 halogen-containing molecules complexed with various Lewis bases (Two of the tested methods, AM1 and RM1, gave results that agree with the QM data.); (2) charge distribution calculations for halobenzene molecules, determined by calculating the solvation free energies of the molecules relative to benzene in explicit and implicit generalized Born (GB) solvents (None of the methods gave results that agree with the experimental data.); and (3) appropriateness of the semiempirical methods in the hybrid quantum-mechanical/molecular-mechanical (QM/MM) scheme, investigated by studying the molecular inhibition of CK2 protein by eight halobenzimidazole and -benzotriazole derivatives using hybrid QM/MM molecular-dynamics (MD) simulations with the inhibitor described at the QM level by the AM1 method and the rest of the system described at the MM level. The pure MM approach with inclusion of an extra point of positive charge on the halogen atom approach gave better results than the hybrid QM/MM approach involving the AM1 method. Also, in comparison with the pure MM-GBSA (generalized Born surface area) binding energies and experimental data, the calculated QM/MM-GBSA binding energies of the inhibitors were improved by replacing the G(GB,QM/MM) solvation term with the corresponding G(GB,MM) term.  相似文献   

19.
A simple interface is proposed for combined quantum mechanical (QM) molecular mechanical (MM) calculations for the systems where the QM and MM regions are connected through covalent bonds. Within this model, the atom that connects the two regions, called YinYang atom here, serves as an ordinary MM atom to other MM atoms and as a hydrogen-like atom to other QM atoms. Only one new empirical parameter is introduced to adjust the length of the connecting bond and is calibrated with the molecule propanol. This model is tested with the computation of equilibrium geometries and protonation energies for dozens of molecules. Special attention is paid on the influence of MM point charges on optimized geometry and protonation energy, and it is found that it is important to maintain local charge-neutrality in the MM region in order for the accurate calculation of the protonation and deprotonation energies. Overall the simple YinYang atom model yields comparable results to some other QM/MM models.  相似文献   

20.
The concept of model chemistries within hybrid QM/MM calculations has been addressed through analysis of the polarization energy determined by two distinct approaches based on (i) induced charges and (ii) induced dipoles. The quantum mechanical polarization energy for four configurations of the water dimer has been determined for a range of basis sets using Morokuma energy decomposition analysis. This benchmark value has been compared to the fully classical polarization energy determined using the induced dipole approach, and the molecular mechanics polarization energy calculated using induced charges within the MM region of hybrid QM/MM calculations. From the water dimer calculations, it is concluded that the induced charge approach is consistent with medium sized basis set calculations whereas the induced dipole approach is consistent with large basis set calculations. This result is highly relevant to the concept of QM/MM model chemistries.  相似文献   

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