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1.
We describe a generalization of the gradient-augmented harmonic Fourier beads method for finding minimum free-energy transition path ensembles and similarly minimum potential energy paths to allow positional restraints on the centers of mass of selected atoms. The generalized gradient-augmented harmonic Fourier beads (ggaHFB) method further extends the scope of the HFB methodology to studying molecule transport across various mobile phases such as lipid membranes. Furthermore, the new implementation improves the applicability of the HFB method to studies of ligand binding, protein folding, and enzyme catalysis as well as modeling equilibrium pulling experiments. Like its predecessor, the ggaHFB method provides accurate energy profiles along the specified paths and in certain simple cases avoids the need for path optimization. The utility of the ggaHFB method is demonstrated with an application to the water permeation through a single-wall (5,5) carbon nanotube with a diameter of 6.78 A and length of 16.0 A. We provide a simple rationale as to why water enters the hydrophobic nanotube and why it does so in pulses and in wire assembly.  相似文献   

2.
The calculation of free-energy barriers by umbrella sampling and many other methods is hampered by the necessity for an a priori choice of the reaction coordinate along which to sample. We avoid this problem by providing a method to search for saddle points on the free-energy surface in many coordinates. The necessary gradients and Hessians of the free energy are obtained by multidimensional umbrella integration. We construct the minimum free-energy path by following the gradient down to minima on the free-energy surface. The change of free energy along the path is obtained by integrating out all coordinates orthogonal to the path. While we expect the method to be applicable to large systems, we test it on the alanine dipeptide in vacuum. The minima, transition states, and free-energy barriers agree well with those obtained previously with other methods.  相似文献   

3.
We propose a free energy calculation method for receptor–ligand binding, which have multiple binding poses that avoids exhaustive enumeration of the poses. For systems with multiple binding poses, the standard procedure is to enumerate orientations of the binding poses, restrain the ligand to each orientation, and then, calculate the binding free energies for each binding pose. In this study, we modify a part of the thermodynamic cycle in order to sample a broader conformational space of the ligand in the binding site. This modification leads to more accurate free energy calculation without performing separate free energy simulations for each binding pose. We applied our modification to simple model host–guest systems as a test, which have only two binding poses, by using a single decoupling method (SDM) in implicit solvent. The results showed that the binding free energies obtained from our method without knowing the two binding poses were in good agreement with the benchmark results obtained by explicit enumeration of the binding poses. Our method is applicable to other alchemical binding free energy calculation methods such as the double decoupling method (DDM) in explicit solvent. We performed a calculation for a protein–ligand system with explicit solvent using our modified thermodynamic path. The results of the free energy simulation along our modified path were in good agreement with the results of conventional DDM, which requires a separate binding free energy calculation for each of the binding poses of the example of phenol binding to T4 lysozyme in explicit solvent. © 2019 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

4.
We present a detailed comparison of computational efficiency and precision for several free energy difference (DeltaF) methods. The analysis includes both equilibrium and nonequilibrium approaches, and distinguishes between unidirectional and bidirectional methodologies. We are primarily interested in comparing two recently proposed approaches, adaptive integration, and single-ensemble path sampling to more established methodologies. As test cases, we study relative solvation free energies of large changes to the size or charge of a Lennard-Jones particle in explicit water. The results show that, for the systems used in this study, both adaptive integration and path sampling offer unique advantages over the more traditional approaches. Specifically, adaptive integration is found to provide very precise long-simulation DeltaF estimates as compared to other methods used in this report, while also offering rapid estimation of DeltaF. The results demonstrate that the adaptive integration approach is the best overall method for the systems studied here. The single-ensemble path sampling approach is found to be superior to ordinary Jarzynski averaging for the unidirectional, "fast-growth" nonequilibrium case. Closer examination of the path sampling approach on a two-dimensional system suggests it may be the overall method of choice when conformational sampling barriers are high. However, it appears that the free energy landscapes for the systems used in this study have rather modest configurational sampling barriers.  相似文献   

5.
The recently introduced hills method (Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 2002, 99, 12562) is a powerful tool to compute the multidimensional free energy surface of intrinsically concerted reactions. We have extended this method by focusing our attention on localizing the lowest free energy path that connects the stable reactant and product states. This path represents the most probable reaction mechanism, similar to the zero temperature intrinsic reaction coordinate, but also includes finite temperature effects. The transformation of the multidimensional problem to a one-dimensional reaction coordinate allows for accurate convergence of the free energy profile along the lowest free energy path using standard free energy methods. Here we apply the hills method, our lowest free energy path search algorithm, and umbrella sampling to the prototype S(N)2 reaction. The hills method replaces the in many cases difficult problem of finding a good reaction coordinate with choosing relatively simple collective variables, such as the bond lengths of the broken and formed chemical bonds. The second part of the paper presents a guide to using the hills method, in which we test and fine-tune the method for optimal accuracy and efficiency using the umbrella sampling results as a reference.  相似文献   

6.
The authors present a new method for searching low free energy paths in complex molecular systems at finite temperature. They introduce two variables that are able to describe the position of a point in configurational space relative to a preassigned path. With the help of these two variables the authors combine features of approaches such as metadynamics or umbrella sampling with those of path based methods. This allows global searches in the space of paths to be performed and a new variational principle for the determination of low free energy paths to be established. Contrary to metadynamics or umbrella sampling the path can be described by an arbitrary large number of variables, still the energy profile along the path can be calculated. The authors exemplify the method numerically by studying the conformational changes of alanine dipeptide.  相似文献   

7.
The path‐based methods of free energy calculation, such as thermodynamic integration and free energy perturbation, are simple in theory, but difficult in practice because in most cases smooth paths do not exist, especially for large molecules. In this article, we present a novel method to build the transition path of a peptide. We use harmonic potentials to restrain its nonhydrogen atom dihedrals in the initial state and set the equilibrium angles of the potentials as those in the final state. Through a series of steps of geometrical optimization, we can construct a smooth and short path from the initial state to the final state. This path can be used to calculate free energy difference. To validate this method, we apply it to a small 10‐ALA peptide and find that the calculated free energy changes in helix‐helix and helix‐hairpin transitions are both self‐convergent and cross‐convergent. We also calculate the free energy differences between different stable states of β‐hairpin trpzip2, and the results show that this method is more efficient than the conventional molecular dynamics method in accurate free energy calculation. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Comput Chem, 2010  相似文献   

8.
Accurate quantum mechanical partition functions and absolute free energies of H(2)O(2) are determined using a realistic potential energy surface [J. Koput, S. Carter, and N. C. Handy, J. Phys. Chem. A 102, 6325 (1998)] for temperatures ranging from 300 to 2,400 K by using Monte Carlo path integral calculations with new, efficient polyatomic importance sampling methods. The path centroids are sampled in Jacobi coordinates via a set of independent ziggurat schemes. The calculations employed enhanced-same-path extrapolation of trapezoidal Trotter Fourier path integrals, and the paths were constructed using fast Fourier sine transforms. Importance sampling was also used in Fourier coefficient space, and adaptively optimized stratified sampling was used in configuration space. The free energy values obtained from the path-integral calculations are compared to separable-mode approximations, to the Pitzer-Gwinn approximation, and to values in thermodynamic tables. Our calculations support the recently proposed revisions to the JANAF tables.  相似文献   

9.
A hybrid quantum/classical path integral Monte Carlo (QC-PIMC) method for calculating the quantum free energy barrier for hydrogen transfer reactions in condensed phases is presented. In this approach, the classical potential of mean force along a collective reaction coordinate is calculated using umbrella sampling techniques in conjunction with molecular dynamics trajectories propagated according to a mapping potential. The quantum contribution is determined for each configuration along the classical trajectory with path integral Monte Carlo calculations in which the beads move according to an effective mapping potential. This type of path integral calculation does not utilize the centroid constraint and can lead to more efficient sampling of the relevant region of conformational space than free-particle path integral sampling. The QC-PIMC method is computationally practical for large systems because the path integral sampling for the quantum nuclei is performed separately from the classical molecular dynamics sampling of the entire system. The utility of the QC-PIMC method is illustrated by an application to hydride transfer in the enzyme dihydrofolate reductase. A comparison of this method to the quantized classical path and grid-based methods for this system is presented.  相似文献   

10.
An approach to find transition pathways in complex systems is presented. The method, which is related to the string method in collective variables of Maragliano et al. (J. Chem. Phys. 2006, 125, 024106), is conceptually simple and straightforward to implement. It consists of refining a putative transition path in the multidimensional space supported by a set of collective variables using the average dynamic drift of those variables. This drift is estimated on-the-fly via swarms of short unbiased trajectories started at different points along the path. Successive iterations of this algorithm, which can be naturally distributed over many computer nodes with negligible interprocessor communication, refine an initial trial path toward the most probable transition path (MPTP) between two stable basins. The method is first tested by determining the pathway for the C7eq to C7ax transition in an all-atom model of the alanine dipeptide in vacuum, which has been studied previously with the string method in collective variables. A transition path is found with a committor distribution peaked at 1/2 near the free energy maximum, in accord with previous results. Last, the method is applied to the allosteric conformational change in the nitrogen regulatory protein C (NtrC), represented here with a two-state elastic network model. Even though more than 550 collective variables are used to describe the conformational change, the path converges rapidly. Again, the committor distribution is found to be peaked around 1/2 near the free energy maximum between the two stable states, confirming that a genuine transition state has been localized in this complex multidimensional system.  相似文献   

11.
A rigorous and generally applicable method for computing solid-liquid coexistence is presented. The method overcomes some of the technical difficulties associated with other solid-liquid simulation procedures and can be implemented within either a molecular dynamics or Monte Carlo framework. The method consists of three steps: First, relative Gibbs free energy curves are created for the solid and liquid phases using histogram reweighting. Next, the free energy difference between the solid and liquid phases is evaluated at a single state point by integrating along a pseudosupercritical transformation path that connects the two phases. Using this result, the solid and liquid free energy curves are referenced to a common point, allowing a single coexistence point to be determined. Finally, Gibbs-Duhem integration is used to determine the full coexistence curve. To evaluate its utility, this method is applied to the Lennard-Jones and NaCl systems. Results for solid-liquid coexistence agree with previous calculations for these systems. In addition, it is shown that the NaCl model does not correctly describe solid-liquid coexistence at high pressures. An analysis of the accuracy of the method indicates that the results are most sensitive to the transformation free energy calculation.  相似文献   

12.
We discuss a method for calculating free energy differences between disordered and ordered phases of self-assembling systems utilizing computer simulations. Applying an external, ordering field, we impose a predefined structure onto the fluid in the disordered phase. The structure in the presence of the external, ordering field closely mimics the structure of the ordered phase (in the absence of an ordering field). Self-consistent field theory or density functional theory provides an accurate estimate for choosing the strength of the ordering field. Subsequently, we gradually switch off the external, ordering field and, in turn, increase the control parameter that drives the self-assembly. The free energy difference along this reversible path connecting the disordered and the ordered state is obtained via thermodynamic integration or expanded ensemble simulation techniques. Utilizing Single-Chain-in-Mean-Field simulations of a symmetric diblock copolymer melt we illustrate the method and calculate the free energy difference between the disordered phase and the lamellar structure at an intermediate incompatibility chiN=20. Evidence for the first-order character of the order-disorder transition at fixed volume is presented. The transition is located at chi(ODT)N=13.65+/-0.10 for an invariant degree of polymerization of N=14 884. The magnitude of the shift of the transition from the mean field prediction qualitatively agrees with other simulations.  相似文献   

13.
The determination of reaction paths for enzyme systems remains a great challenge for current computational methods. In this paper we present an efficient method for the determination of minimum energy reaction paths with the ab initio quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical approach. Our method is based on an adaptation of the path optimization procedure by Ayala and Schlegel for small molecules in gas phase, the iterative quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical (QM/MM) optimization method developed earlier in our laboratory and the introduction of a new metric defining the distance between different structures in the configuration space. In this method we represent the reaction path by a discrete set of structures. For each structure we partition the atoms into a core set that usually includes the QM subsystem and an environment set that usually includes the MM subsystem. These two sets are optimized iteratively: the core set is optimized to approximate the reaction path while the environment set is optimized to the corresponding energy minimum. In the optimization of the core set of atoms for the reaction path, we introduce a new metric to define the distances between the points on the reaction path, which excludes the soft degrees of freedom from the environment set and includes extra weights on coordinates describing chemical changes. Because the reaction path is represented by discrete structures and the optimization for each can be performed individually with very limited coupling, our method can be executed in a natural and efficient parallelization, with each processor handling one of the structures. We demonstrate the applicability and efficiency of our method by testing it on two systems previously studied by our group, triosephosphate isomerase and 4-oxalocrotonate tautomerase. In both cases the minimum energy paths for both enzymes agree with the previously reported paths.  相似文献   

14.
A method recently developed to rigorously determine solid-liquid equilibrium using a free-energy-based analysis has been extended to analyze multiatom molecular systems. This method is based on using a pseudosupercritical transformation path to reversibly transform between solid and liquid phases. Integration along this path yields the free energy difference at a single state point, which can then be used to determine the free energy difference as a function of temperature and therefore locate the coexistence temperature at a fixed pressure. The primary extension reported here is the introduction of an external potential field capable of inducing center of mass order along with secondary orientational order for molecules. The method is used to calculate the melting point of 1-H-1,2,4-triazole and benzene. Despite the fact that the triazole model gives accurate bulk densities for the liquid and crystal phases, it is found to do a poor job of reproducing the experimental crystal structure and heat of fusion. Consequently, it yields a melting point that is 100 K lower than the experimental value. On the other hand, the benzene model has been parametrized extensively to match a wide range of properties and yields a melting point that is only 20 K lower than the experimental value. Previous work in which a simple "direct heating" method was used actually found that the melting point of the benzene model was 50 K higher than the experimental value. This demonstrates the importance of using proper free energy methods to compute phase behavior. It also shows that the melting point is a very sensitive measure of force field quality that should be considered in parametrization efforts. The method described here provides a relatively simple approach for computing melting points of molecular systems.  相似文献   

15.
We derive and implement symmetry-projected Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov (HFB) equations and apply them to the molecular electronic structure problem. All symmetries (particle number, spin, spatial, and complex conjugation) are deliberately broken and restored in a self-consistent variation-after-projection approach. We show that the resulting method yields a comprehensive black-box treatment of static correlations with effective one-electron (mean-field) computational cost. The ensuing wave function is of multireference character and permeates the entire Hilbert space of the problem. The energy expression is different from regular HFB theory but remains a functional of an independent quasiparticle density matrix. All reduced density matrices are expressible as an integration of transition density matrices over a gauge grid. We present several proof-of-principle examples demonstrating the compelling power of projected quasiparticle theory for quantum chemistry.  相似文献   

16.
Using the path integral formalism or the Feynman-Hibbs approach, various expressions for the free energy of quantization for a molecular system in the condensed phase can be derived. These lead to alternative methods to directly compute quantization free energies from molecular dynamics computer simulations, which were investigated with an eye to their practical use. For a test system of liquid neon, two methods are shown to be most efficient for a direct evaluation of the excess free energy of quantization. One of them makes use of path integral simulations in combination with a single-step free energy perturbation approach and was previously reported in the literature. The other method employs a Feynman-Hibbs effective Hamiltonian together with the thermodynamic integration formalism. However, both methods are found to give less accurate results for the excess free energy of quantization than the estimate obtained from explicit path integral calculations on the excess free energy of the neon liquid in the classical and quantum mechanical limit. Suggestions are made to make both methods more accurate.  相似文献   

17.
We develop an efficient technique for computing free energies corresponding to conformational transitions in complex systems by combining a Monte Carlo ensemble of trajectories generated by the shooting algorithm with umbrella sampling. Motivated by the transition path sampling method, our scheme "BOLAS" (named after a cowboy's lasso) preserves microscopic reversibility and leads to the correct equilibrium distribution. This makes possible computation of free energy profiles along complex reaction coordinates for biomolecular systems with a lower systematic error compared to traditional, force-biased umbrella sampling protocols. We demonstrate the validity of BOLAS for a bistable potential, and illustrate the method's scope with an application to the sugar repuckering transition in a solvated deoxyadenosine molecule.  相似文献   

18.
We propose a generalization of the intrinsic reaction coordinate (IRC) for quantum many-body systems described in terms of the mass-weighted ring polymer centroids in the imaginary-time path integral theory. This novel kind of reaction coordinate, which may be called the "centroid IRC," corresponds to the minimum free energy path connecting reactant and product states with a least amount of reversible work applied to the center of masses of the quantum nuclei, i.e., the centroids. We provide a numerical procedure to obtain the centroid IRC based on first principles by combining ab initio path integral simulation with the string method. This approach is applied to NH(3) molecule and N(2)H(5) (-) ion as well as their deuterated isotopomers to study the importance of nuclear quantum effects in the intramolecular and intermolecular proton transfer reactions. We find that, in the intramolecular proton transfer (inversion) of NH(3), the free energy barrier for the centroid variables decreases with an amount of about 20% compared to the classical one at the room temperature. In the intermolecular proton transfer of N(2)H(5) (-), the centroid IRC is largely deviated from the "classical" IRC, and the free energy barrier is reduced by the quantum effects even more drastically.  相似文献   

19.
One reason that free energy difference calculations are notoriously difficult in molecular systems is due to insufficient conformational overlap, or similarity, between the two states or systems of interest. The degree of overlap is irrelevant, however, if the absolute free energy of each state can be computed. We present a method for calculating the absolute free energy that employs a simple construction of an exactly computable reference system which possesses high overlap with the state of interest. The approach requires only a physical ensemble of conformations generated via simulation and an auxiliary calculation of approximately equal central-processing-unit cost. Moreover, the calculations can converge to the correct free energy value even when the physical ensemble is incomplete or improperly distributed. As a "proof of principle," we use the approach to correctly predict free energies for test systems where the absolute values can be calculated exactly and also to predict the conformational equilibrium for leucine dipeptide in implicit solvent.  相似文献   

20.
《Chemical physics》1987,114(1):111-116
The collisional deactivation of the internal energy of vibrationally highly excited hexafluorobenzene (HFB) molecules was examined by the analysis of ultraviolet absorption spectra of excited HFB molecules produced by excitation with an ArF(193 nm) laser. The decay time profile of the internal energy was calculated from the observed absorption decay profile of the hot molecule using the conversion relation between the absorbance by hot molecules and the internal energy. Thus the average energy 〈ΔE〉 transferred per collision was estimated by two different models; energy-independent and energy-dependent function for the decay of the internal energy. The obtained values of 〈ΔE〉 indicate that the energy-dependent model may give reasonable values for 〈ΔE〉, but as far as the value of 〈ΔE〉 is concerned, the energy-independent model is likely to be applicable to the analysis in this reaction system. The collisional deactivation mechanism of the hot HFB molecule and the heating-up effect observed at shorter wavelengths are discussed on the basis of the conversion curve.  相似文献   

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