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1.
The calculation of binding affinities for flexible ligands has hitherto required the availability of reliable molecular mechanics parameters for the ligands, a restriction that can in principle be lifted by using a mixed quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics (QM/MM) representation in which the ligand is treated quantum mechanically. The feasibility of this approach is evaluated here, combining QM/MM with the Poisson-Boltzmann/surface area model of continuum solvation and testing the method on a set of 47 benzamidine derivatives binding to trypsin. The experimental range of the absolute binding energy (DeltaG = -3.9 to -7.6 kcal/mol) is reproduced well, with a root-mean-square (RMS) error of 1.2 kcal/mol. When QM/MM is applied without reoptimization to the very different ligands of FK506 binding protein the RMS error is only 0.7 kcal/mol. The results show that QM/MM is a promising new avenue for automated docking and scoring of flexible ligands. Suggestions are made for further improvements in accuracy.  相似文献   

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The correct representation of solute-water interactions is essential for the accurate simulation of most biological phenomena. Several highly accurate quantum methods are available to deal with solvation by using both implicit and explicit solvents. So far, however, most evaluations of those methods were based on a single conformation, which neglects solute entropy. Here, we present the first test of a novel approach to determine hydration free energies that uses molecular mechanics (MM) to sample phase space and quantum mechanics (QM) to evaluate the potential energies. Free energies are determined by using re-weighting with the Non-Boltzmann Bennett (NBB) method. In this context, the method is referred to as QM-NBB. Based on snapshots from MM sampling and accounting for their correct Boltzmann weight, it is possible to obtain hydration free energies that incorporate the effect of solute entropy. We evaluate the performance of several QM implicit solvent models, as well as explicit solvent QM/MM for the blind subset of the SAMPL4 hydration free energy challenge. While classical free energy simulations with molecular dynamics give root mean square deviations (RMSD) of 2.8 and 2.3 kcal/mol, the hybrid approach yields an improved RMSD of 1.6 kcal/mol. By selecting an appropriate functional and basis set, the RMSD can be reduced to 1 kcal/mol for calculations based on a single conformation. Results for a selected set of challenging molecules imply that this RMSD can be further reduced by using NBB to reweight MM trajectories with the SMD implicit solvent model.  相似文献   

4.
We report systematic quantum mechanics‐only (QM‐only) and QM/molecular mechanics (MM) calculations on an enzyme‐catalyzed reaction to assess the convergence behavior of QM‐only and QM/MM energies with respect to the size of the chosen QM region. The QM and MM parts are described by density functional theory (typically B3LYP/def2‐SVP) and the CHARMM force field, respectively. Extending our previous work on acetylene hydratase with QM regions up to 157 atoms (Liao and Thiel, J. Chem. Theory Comput. 2012, 8, 3793), we performed QM/MM geometry optimizations with a QM region M4 composed of 408 atoms, as well as further QM/MM single‐point calculations with even larger QM regions up to 657 atoms. A charge deletion analysis was conducted for the previously used QM/MM model ( M3a , with a QM region of 157 atoms) to identify all MM residues with strong electrostatic contributions to the reaction energetics (typically more than 2 kcal/mol), which were then included in M4 . QM/MM calculations with this large QM region M4 lead to the same overall mechanism as the previous QM/MM calculations with M3a , but there are some variations in the relative energies of the stationary points, with a mean absolute deviation (MAD) of 2.7 kcal/mol. The energies of the two relevant transition states are close to each other at all levels applied (typically within 2 kcal/mol), with the first (second) one being rate‐limiting in the QM/MM calculations with M3a ( M4 ). QM‐only gas‐phase calculations give a very similar energy profile for QM region M4 (MAD of 1.7 kcal/mol), contrary to the situation for M3a where we had previously found significant discrepancies between the QM‐only and QM/MM results (MAD of 7.9 kcal/mol). Extension of the QM region beyond M4 up to M7 (657 atoms) leads to only rather small variations in the relative energies from single‐point QM‐only and QM/MM calculations (MAD typically about 1–2 kcal/mol). In the case of acetylene hydratase, a model with 408 QM atoms thus seems sufficient to achieve convergence in the computed relative energies to within 1–2 kcal/mol.Copyright © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

5.
The semiempirical methods of the OMx family (orthogonalization models OM1, OM2, and OM3) are known to describe biochemical systems more accurately than standard semiempirical approaches such as AM1. We investigate the benefits of augmenting these methods with an empirical dispersion term (OMx-D) taken from recent density functional work, without modifying the standard OMx parameters. Significant improvements are achieved for non-covalent interactions, with mean unsigned errors of 1.41 kcal/mol (OM2-D) and 1.31 kcal/mol (OM3-D) for the binding energy of the complexes in the JSCH-2005 data base. This supports the use of these augmented methods in quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical (QM/MM) studies of biomolecules, for example during system preparation and equilibration. As an illustrative application, we present QM and QM/MM calculations on the binding between antibody 34E4 and a hapten, where OM3-D performs better than the methods without dispersion terms (AM1, OM3).  相似文献   

6.
In this study, the hydration of carbon dioxide and the formation of bicarbonate in human carbonic anhydrase II have been examined. From semiempirical QM/MM molecular dynamics studies, dominant conformations of the protein backbone, possibly contributing to the catalytic activity, have been isolated and further examined by means of density functional QM/MM methods. In agreement with experimental observations, a binding site for cyanate, which acts as an inhibitor, has been located, whereas for carbon dioxide, depending on the conformation of the protein environment, either a different binding site or no binding site has been found. In the latter case, carbon dioxide diffuses barrierless to the zinc-bound oxygen, and then a weakly bound bicarbonate complex is formed. The formed complex is characterized by a long C-O bond to the zinc-bound hydroxide. The nature of the calculated stationary points was verified by determination of vibrational frequencies. Finally, the dissociation of the formed bicarbonate from zinc has been considered. Therefore, a water molecule was included in the QM zone of the QM/MM hybrid potential, and minimization yielded a pentacoordinated intermediate. From a potential energy scan, an activation energy of 6.2 kcal/mol for dissociation of bicarbonate from Zn has been found.  相似文献   

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We have developed a method to estimate free energies of reactions in proteins, called QM/MM-PBSA. It estimates the internal energy of the reactive site by quantum mechanical (QM) calculations, whereas bonded, electrostatic, and van der Waals interactions with the surrounding protein are calculated at the molecular mechanics (MM) level. The electrostatic part of the solvation energy of the reactant and the product is estimated by solving the Poisson-Boltzmann (PB) equation, and the nonpolar part of the solvation energy is estimated from the change in solvent-accessible surface area (SA). Finally, the change in entropy is estimated from the vibrational frequencies. We test this method for five proton-transfer reactions in the active sites of [Ni,Fe] hydrogenase and copper nitrite reductase. We show that QM/MM-PBSA reproduces the results of a strict QM/MM free-energy perturbation method with a mean absolute deviation (MAD) of 8-10 kJ/mol if snapshots from molecular dynamics simulations are used and 4-14 kJ/mol if a single QM/MM structure is used. This is appreciably better than the original QM/MM results or if the QM energies are supplemented with a point-charge model, a self-consistent reaction field, or a PB model of the protein and the solvent, which give MADs of 22-36 kJ/mol for the same test set.  相似文献   

9.
Structural water molecule 301 found at the interface of HIV protease-inhibitor complexes function as a hydrogen bond (H-bond) donor to carbonyl groups of the inhibitor as well as H-bond acceptor to amide/amine groups of the flap region of the protease. In this study, six systems of HIV protease-inhibitor complexes were analyzed, which have the presence of this "conserved" structural water molecule using a two-layer QM/MM ONIOM method. The combination of QM/MM and QM method enabled the calculation of strain energies of the bound ligands as well as the determination of their binding energies in the ligand-water and ligand-water-protease complexes. Although the ligand experiences considerable strain in the protein bound structure, the H-bond interactions through the structural water overcomes this strain effect to give a net stability in the range of 16-24 kcal/mol. For instance, in 1HIV system, the strain energy of the ligand was 12.2 kcal/mol, whereas the binding energy associated with the structural water molecule was 20.8 kcal/mol. In most of the cases, the calculated binding energy of structural water molecule showed the same trend as that of the experimental binding free energy values. Further, the classical MD simulations carried out on 1HVL system with and without structural water 301 showed that this conserved water molecule enhances the H-bond dynamics occurring at the Asp-bound active site region of the protease-inhibitor system, and therefore it will have a direct influence on the mechanism of drug action.  相似文献   

10.
We investigate the effect of systematically applying molecular dynamics (MD) and quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics (QM/MM) to docked poses in an attempt to improve the correspondence between theoretical prediction and experimental observation. The proposed scheme involves running a short time scale MD simulation on a docked ligand pose (and any known structurally important crystal structure waters in the active site), followed by QM/MM minimization. Both of these steps are relatively fast for moderately sized ligands; longer time scale MD involving the protein is not found to improve the results. The final binding energy is given in terms of the QM/MM total energy, a van der Waals correction, and a term to account for desolvation effects. This methodology is first tested with a trypsin inhibitor, for which we establish the importance of running MD before reoptimizing with QM/MM. The method is then applied to cytochrome c peroxidase using a set of binders and decoys. In this example, the proposed methodology affords much better discrimination between binders and decoys than the traditional docking approach used. For both systems presented, application of this protocol results in a significantly better energetic ranking and a smaller root mean squared deviation from known crystallographic ligand poses. This work highlights the importance of including polarization effects through QM/MM and of sampling with MD to refine a set of initial docked poses.  相似文献   

11.
A quantum mechanics (QM)/molecular mechanics (MM)-based free energy perturbation (FEP) method, developed recently, provides most accurate estimation of binding affinities. The validity of the method was evaluated for a large set of diverse inhibitors for fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase (FBPase), a target enzyme for type-II diabetes mellitus. The validation set comprises of 22 important structurally different mutations. The calculated relative binding free energies using the QM/MM-based FEP method reproduce the experimental values with exceptional precision of less than ±0.5 kcal/mol. The CPU requirements for QM/MM-based FEP are about fivefold greater than conventional FEP methods, but it is superior in accuracy of predictions. In addition, the QM/MM-based FEP method eliminates the need for time-consuming development of MM force field parameters, which are frequently required for novel inhibitors described by MM. Future automation of the method and parallelization of the code for 128/256/512 cluster computers is expected to enhance the speed and increase its use for drug design and lead optimization. The present application of QM/MM-based FEP method for structurally diverse set of analogs serves to enhance the scope of FEP method and demonstrate the utility of QM/MM-based FEP method for its potential in drug discovery.  相似文献   

12.
We have estimated free energies for the binding of eight carboxylate ligands to two variants of the octa-acid deep-cavity host in the SAMPL6 blind-test challenge (with or without endo methyl groups on the four upper-rim benzoate groups, OAM and OAH, respectively). We employed free-energy perturbation (FEP) for relative binding energies at the molecular mechanics (MM) and the combined quantum mechanical (QM) and MM (QM/MM) levels, the latter obtained with the reference-potential approach with QM/MM sampling for the MM → QM/MM FEP. The semiempirical QM method PM6-DH+ was employed for the ligand in the latter calculations. Moreover, binding free energies were also estimated from QM/MM optimised structures, combined with COSMO-RS estimates of the solvation energy and thermostatistical corrections from MM frequencies. They were performed at the PM6-DH+ level of theory with the full host and guest molecule in the QM system (and also four water molecules in the geometry optimisations) for 10–20 snapshots from molecular dynamics simulations of the complex. Finally, the structure with the lowest free energy was recalculated using the dispersion-corrected density-functional theory method TPSS-D3, for both the structure and the energy. The two FEP approaches gave similar results (PM6-DH+/MM slightly better for OAM), which were among the five submissions with the best performance in the challenge and gave the best results without any fit to data from the SAMPL5 challenge, with mean absolute deviations (MAD) of 2.4–5.2 kJ/mol and a correlation coefficient (R2) of 0.77–0.93. This is the first time QM/MM approaches give binding free energies that are competitive to those obtained with MM for the octa-acid host. The QM/MM-optimised structures gave somewhat worse performance (MAD?=?3–8 kJ/mol and R2?=?0.1–0.9), but the results were improved compared to previous studies of this system with similar methods.  相似文献   

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QM/MM methods have been developed as a computationally feasible solution to QM simulation of chemical processes, such as enzyme-catalyzed reactions, within a more approximate MM representation of the condensed-phase environment. However, there has been no independent method for checking the quality of this representation, especially for highly nonisotropic protein environments such as those surrounding enzyme active sites. Hence, the validity of QM/MM methods is largely untested. Here we use the possibility of performing all-QM calculations at the semiempirical PM3 level with a linear-scaling method (MOZYME) to assess the performance of a QM/MM method (PM3/AMBER94 force field). Using two model pathways for the hydride-ion transfer reaction of the enzyme dihydrofolate reductase studied previously (Titmuss et al., Chem Phys Lett 2000, 320, 169-176), we have analyzed the reaction energy contributions (QM, QM/MM, and MM) from the QM/MM results and compared them with analogous-region components calculated via an energy partitioning scheme implemented into MOZYME. This analysis further divided the MOZYME components into Coulomb, resonance and exchange energy terms. For the model in which the MM coordinates are kept fixed during the reaction, we find that the MOZYME and QM/MM total energy profiles agree very well, but that there are significant differences in the energy components. Most significantly there is a large change (approximately 16 kcal/mol) in the MOZYME MM component due to polarization of the MM region surrounding the active site, and which arises mostly from MM atoms close to (<10 A) the active-site QM region, which is not modelled explicitly by our QM/MM method. However, for the model where the MM coordinates are allowed to vary during the reaction, we find large differences in the MOZYME and QM/MM total energy profiles, with a discrepancy of 52 kcal/mol between the relative reaction (product-reactant) energies. This is largely due to a difference in the MM energies of 58 kcal/mol, of which we can attribute approximately 40 kcal/mol to geometry effects in the MM region and the remainder, as before, to MM region polarization. Contrary to the fixed-geometry model, there is no correlation of the MM energy changes with distance from the QM region, nor are they contributed by only a few residues. Overall, the results suggest that merely extending the size of the QM region in the QM/MM calculation is not a universal solution to the MOZYME- and QM/MM-method differences. They also suggest that attaching physical significance to MOZYME Coulomb, resonance and exchange components is problematic. Although we conclude that it would be possible to reparameterize the QM/MM force field to reproduce MOZYME energies, a better way to account for both the effects of the protein environment and known deficiencies in semiempirical methods would be to parameterize the force field based on data from DFT or ab initio QM linear-scaling calculations. Such a force field could be used efficiently in MD simulations to calculate free energies.  相似文献   

15.
In this article, the convergence of quantum mechanical (QM) free‐energy simulations based on molecular dynamics simulations at the molecular mechanics (MM) level has been investigated. We have estimated relative free energies for the binding of nine cyclic carboxylate ligands to the octa‐acid deep‐cavity host, including the host, the ligand, and all water molecules within 4.5 Å of the ligand in the QM calculations (158–224 atoms). We use single‐step exponential averaging (ssEA) and the non‐Boltzmann Bennett acceptance ratio (NBB) methods to estimate QM/MM free energy with the semi‐empirical PM6‐DH2X method, both based on interaction energies. We show that ssEA with cumulant expansion gives a better convergence and uses half as many QM calculations as NBB, although the two methods give consistent results. With 720,000 QM calculations per transformation, QM/MM free‐energy estimates with a precision of 1 kJ/mol can be obtained for all eight relative energies with ssEA, showing that this approach can be used to calculate converged QM/MM binding free energies for realistic systems and large QM partitions. © 2016 The Authors. Journal of Computational Chemistry Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

16.
The mechanism of enzymatic peptide hydrolysis in matrix metalloproteinase‐2 (MMP‐2) was studied at atomic resolution through quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics (QM/MM) simulations. An all‐atom three‐dimensional molecular model was constructed on the basis of a crystal structure from the Protein Data Bank (ID: 1QIB), and the oligopeptide Ace‐Gln‐Gly~Ile‐Ala‐Gly‐Nme was considered as the substrate. Two QM/MM software packages and several computational protocols were employed to calculate QM/MM energy profiles for a four‐step mechanism involving an initial nucleophilic attack followed by hydrogen bond rearrangement, proton transfer, and C? N bond cleavage. These QM/MM calculations consistently yield rather low overall barriers for the chemical steps, in the range of 5–10 kcal/mol, for diverse QM treatments (PBE0, B3LYP, and BB1K density functionals as well as local coupled cluster treatments) and two MM force fields (CHARMM and AMBER). It, thus, seems likely that product release is the rate‐limiting step in MMP‐2 catalysis. This is supported by an exploration of various release channels through QM/MM reaction path calculations and steered molecular dynamics simulations. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

17.
Combined quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics (QM/MM) modelling has the potential to answer fundamental questions about enzyme mechanisms and catalysis. Calculations using QM/MM methods can now predict barriers for enzyme-catalysed reactions with unprecedented, near chemical accuracy, i.e. to within 1 kcal/mol in the best cases. Quantitative predictions from first-principles calculations were only previously possible for very small molecules. At this level, quantitative, reliable predictions can be made about the mechanisms of enzyme-catalysed reactions. This development signals a new era of computational biochemistry.  相似文献   

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We present results of a theoretical analysis of the phosphorylation reaction in cAMP-dependent protein kinase using a combined quantum mechanical and molecular mechanics (QM/MM) approach. Detailed analysis of the reaction pathway is provided using a novel QM/MM implementation of the nudged elastic band method, finite temperature fluctuations of the protein environment are taken into account using free energy calculations, and an analysis of hydrogen bond interactions is performed on the basis of calculated frequency shifts. The late transfer of the substrate proton to the conserved aspartate (D166), the activation free energy of 15 kcal/mol, and the slight exothermic (-3 kcal/mol) character of the reaction are all consistent with the experimental data. The near attack conformation of D166 in the reactant state is maintained by interactions with threonine-201, asparagine-177, and most notably by a conserved water molecule serving as a strong structural link between the primary metal ion and the D166. The secondary Mg ion acts as a Lewis acid, attacking the beta-gamma bridging oxygen of ATP. This interaction, along with a strong hydrogen bond between the D166 and the substrate, contributes to the stabilization of the transition state. Lys-168 maintains a hydrogen bond to a transferring phosphoryl group throughout a reaction process. This interaction increases in the product state and contributes to its stabilization.  相似文献   

20.
We used molecular dynamics simulation and free energy perturbation (FEP) methods to investigate the hydride-ion transfer step in the mechanism for the nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH)-dependent reduction of a novel substrate by the enzyme dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR). The system is represented by a coupled quantum mechanical and molecular mechanical (QM/MM) model based on the AM1 semiempirical molecular orbital method for the reacting substrate and NADPH cofactor fragments, the AMBER force field for DHFR, and the TIP3P model for solvent water. The FEP calculations were performed for a number of choices for the QM system. The substrate, 8-methylpterin, was treated quantum mechanically in all the calculations, while the larger cofactor molecule was partitioned into various QM and MM regions with the addition of “link” atoms (F, CH3, and H). Calculations were also carried out with the entire NADPH molecule treated by QM. The free energies of reaction and the net charges on the NADPH fragments were used to determine the most appropriate QM/MM model. The hydride-ion transfer was also carried out over several FEP pathways, and the QM and QM/MM component free energies thus calculated were found to be state functions (i.e., independent of pathway). A ca. 10 kcal/mol increase in free energy for the hydride-ion transfer with an activation barrier of ca. 30 kcal/mol was calculated. The increase in free energy on the hydride-ion transfer arose largely from the QM/MM component. Analysis of the QM/MM energy components suggests that, although a number of charged residues may contribute to the free energy change through long-range electrostatic interactions, the only interaction that can account for the 10 kcal/mol increase in free energy is the hydrogen bond between the carboxylate side chain of Glu30 (avian DHFR) and the activated (protonated) substrate. © 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Comput Chem 19: 977–988, 1998  相似文献   

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