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1.
Selection of appropriate partial charges in a molecule is crucial to derive good quantitative structure–activity relationship models. In this work, several partial atomic charges were assigned and tested in a comparative molecular field analysis (CoMFA) models. Many CoMFA models were generated for a series of hypoxia inducible factor 1 (HIF‐1) inhibitors using various partial atomic charges including charge equalization, Mülliken population analysis (MPA), natural population analysis, and electrostatic potential (ESP)‐derived charges. These atomic charges were investigated at various theoretical levels such as empirical, semiempirical, Hartree–Fock (HF), and density functional theory (DFT). Among them, Merz‐Singh‐Kollman (MK) ESP‐derived charges at the level of HF/6‐31G* gave the highest predictive q2 with experimental pIC50 values. With this charge scheme, a detailed analysis of CoMFA model was performed to understand the electrostatic interactions between ligand and receptor. More elaborate charge calculation schemes such as HF and DFT correlated more strongly with activity than empirical or semiempirical schemes. The choice of optimization methods was important. As geometries were fully optimized at the given levels of theory, the aligned structures were different. They differed considerably, especially for the flexible parts. This was likely the source of the substantial variation of q2 values, even when the same steric factor was considered without electrostatic parameters. ESP‐derived charges were most appropriate to describe CoMFA electrostatic interactions among MPA, NBA, and ESP charges. Overall q2 values vary considerably (0.8–0.5) depending on the charge schemes applied. The results demonstrate the need to consider more appropriate atomic charges rather than default CoMFA charges. © 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Int J Quantum Chem, 2012  相似文献   

2.
Currently, all standard force fields for biomolecular simulations use point charges to model intermolecular electrostatic interactions. This is a fast and simple approach but has deficiencies when the electrostatic potential (ESP) is compared to that from ab initio methods. Here, we show how atomic multipoles can be rigorously implemented into common biomolecular force fields. For this, a comprehensive set of local reference axis systems is introduced, which represents a universal solution for treating atom‐centered multipoles for all small organic molecules and proteins. Furthermore, we introduce a new method for fitting atomic multipole moments to the quantum mechanically derived ESP. This methods yields a 50–90% error reduction compared to both point charges fit to the ESP and multipoles directly calculated from the ab initio electron density. It is shown that it is necessary to directly fit the multipole moments of conformational ensembles to the ESP. Ignoring the conformational dependence or averaging over parameters from different conformations dramatically deteriorates the results obtained with atomic multipole moments, rendering multipoles worse than partial charges. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

3.
4.
We have recently developed a new class IV charge model for calculating partial atomic charges in molecules. The new model, called charge model 3 (CM3), was parameterized for calculations on molecules containing H, Li, C, N, O, F, Si, S, P, Cl, and Br by Hartree–Fock theory and by hybrid density functional theory (HDFT) based on the modified Perdew–Wang density functional with several basis sets. In the present article, we extend CM3 for calculating partial atomic charges by Hartree–Fock theory with the economical but well balanced MIDI! basis set. Then, using a test set of accurate dipole moments for molecules containing nitramine functional groups (which include many high-energy materials), we demonstrate the utility of several parameters designed to improve the charges in molecules containing both N and O atoms. We also show that one of our most recently developed CM3 models that is designed for use with wave functions calculated at the mPWXPW91/MIDI! level of theory (where X denotes a variable percentage of Hartree–Fock exchange) gives accurate charge distributions in nitramines without additional parameters for N and O. To demonstrate the reliability of partial atomic charges calculated with CM3, we use these atomic charges to calculate polarization free energies for several nitramines, including the commonly used explosives 1,3,5-trinitro-s-triazine (RDX) and 2,4,6,8,10,12-hexanitrohexaazaisowurtzitane (HNIW), in nitromethane. These polarization energies are large and negative, indicating that electrostatic interactions between the charge distribution of the molecule and the solvent make a large contribution to the free energy of solvation of nitramines. By extension, the same conclusion should apply to solid-state condensation. Also, in contrast to some other charge models, CM3 yields atomic charges that are relatively insensitive to the presence of buried atoms and small conformational changes in the molecule, as well as to the level of treatment of electron correlation. This type of charge model should be useful in the future development of solvation models and force fields designed to estimate intramolecular interactions of nitramines in the condensed phase.  相似文献   

5.
Inspired by the idea of charge decomposition in calculation of the dipole preserving and polarization consistent charges (Zhang et al., J. Comput. Chem. 2011, 32, 2127), we have proposed a numerically stable restrained electrostatic potential (ESP)‐based charge fitting method for protein. The atomic charge is composed of two parts. The dominant part is fixed to a predefined value (e.g., AMBER charge), and the residual part is to be determined by restrained fitting to residual ESP on grid points around the molecule. Nonuniform weighting factors as a function of the dominant charge are assigned to the atoms. Because the residual part is several folds to several orders smaller than the dominant part, the impact of ill‐conditioning is alleviated. This charge fitting method can be used in quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical (QM/MM) simulations and similar studies, where QM calculated electronic properties are frequently mapped to partial atomic charges. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

6.
The AM1‐BCC method quickly and efficiently generates high‐quality atomic charges for use in condensed‐phase simulations. The underlying features of the electron distribution including formal charge and delocalization are first captured by AM1 atomic charges for the individual molecule. Bond charge corrections (BCCs), which have been parameterized against the HF/6‐31G* electrostatic potential (ESP) of a training set of compounds containing relevant functional groups, are then added using a formalism identical to the consensus BCI (bond charge increment) approach. As a proof of the concept, we fit BCCs simultaneously to 45 compounds including O‐, N‐, and S‐containing functionalities, aromatics, and heteroaromatics, using only 41 BCC parameters. AM1‐BCC yields charge sets of comparable quality to HF/6‐31G* ESP‐derived charges in a fraction of the time while reducing instabilities in the atomic charges compared to direct ESP‐fit methods. We then apply the BCC parameters to a small “test set” consisting of aspirin, d ‐glucose, and eryodictyol; the AM1‐BCC model again provides atomic charges of quality comparable with HF/6‐31G* RESP charges, as judged by an increase of only 0.01 to 0.02 atomic units in the root‐mean‐square (RMS) error in ESP. Based on these encouraging results, we intend to parameterize the AM1‐BCC model to provide a consistent charge model for any organic or biological molecule. © 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Comput Chem 21: 132–146, 2000  相似文献   

7.
It is demonstrated that semiempirical methods give electrostatic potential (ESP) derived atomic point charges that are in reasonable agreement with ab initio ESP charges. Furthermore, we find that MNDO ESP charges are superior to AM1 ESP charges in correlating with ESP charges derived from the 6-31G* basis set. Thus, it is possible to obtain 6-31G* quality point charges by simply scaling MNDO ESP charges. The charges are scaled in a linear (y = Mx) manner to conserve charge. In this way researchers desiring to carry out force field simulations or minimizations can obtain charges by using MNDO, which requires much less computer time than the corresponding 6-31G* calculation.  相似文献   

8.
Quantum mechanical (ab initio and semiempirical) and force field calculations are reported for representative torsion potentials in several tetrahydropyran derivatives. The overall agreement between the various methods is quite good except that the AMBER torsion profiles are sensitive to the choice of atomic point charges. Using electrostatic potential (ESP) derived atomic point charges determined with the STO-3G basis set we find that AMBER is able to match the best quantum mechanical results quite well. However, when the point charges are derived using the 6-31G* basis set we find that scaling the intramolecular electrostatic nonbond interactions is necessary. AM1 does not work very well for these compounds when compared to the ab initio methods and, therefore, should only be used in cases when ab initio calculations would be prohibitive. Based upon our results we feel that any force field that makes use of 6-31G* ESP derived atomic point charges will need to scale intramolecular interactions. Implications of scaling intramolecular interactions to the development of force fields based on 6-31G* ESP derived atomic point charges are discussed. © 1992 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

9.
Four commonly used molecular mechanics force fields, CHARMM22, OPLS, CVFF, and GROMOS87, are compared for their ability to reproduce experimental free energies of hydration (ΔGhydr) from molecular dynamics (MD) simulations for a set of small nonpolar and polar organic molecules: propane, cyclopropane, dimethylether, and acetone. ΔGhydr values were calculated by multiconfiguration thermodynamic integration for each of the different force fields with three different sets of partial atomic charges: full charges from an electrostatic potential fit (ESP), and ESP charges scaled by 0.8 and 0.6. All force fields, except for GROMOS87, give reasonable results for ΔGhydr · if partial atomic charges of appropriate magnitude are assigned. For GROMOS87, the agreement with experiment for hydrocarbons (propane and ethane) was improved considerably by modifying the repulsive part of the carbon-water oxygen Lennard-Jones potential. The small molecules studied are related to the chemical moieties constituting camphor (C10Hl6O). By invoking force-field transferability, we calculated the ΔGhydr for camphor. With the modified GROMOS force field, a ΔGhydr within 4 kJ/mol of the experimental value of −14.8 kJ/mol was obtained. Camphor is one of the largest molecules for which an absolute hydration free energy has been calculated by molecular simulation. The accuracy and reliability of the thermodynamic integration calculations were analyzed in detail and we found that, for ΔGhydr calculations for the set of small molecules in aqueous solution, molecular dynamics simulations of 0.8–1.0 ns in length give an upper statistical error bound of 1.5 kJ/mol, whereas shorter simulations of 0.25 nm in length given an upper statistical error bound of 3.5 kJ/mol. © 1997 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

10.
利用量子化学软件包Crystal计算了立方周期性边界条件下液态水体系的静电势(ESP)和静电场(EF).在此基础上,提出了一种由第一性原理方法获取周期体系中原子的部分电荷的快捷方法.该方法把由周期性边界条件引入的平均静电势准mean作为一个拟合参数,通过对第一性原理静电势与Ewald加和法静电势的最小二乘法拟合而实现.值得说明的是,比较静电势与静电场拟合方法,前者的相对拟合误差仅为2%-3%,比后者小一个数量级.考察了四种电荷限制条件下,静电势、静电场拟合的水分子原子部分电荷及偶极矩的分布情况.  相似文献   

11.
We present a simple and practical method to include ligand electronic polarization in molecular dynamics (MD) simulation of biomolecular systems. The method involves periodically spawning quantum mechanical (QM) electrostatic potential (ESP) calculations on an extra set of computer processors using molecular coordinate snapshots from a running parallel MD simulation. The QM ESPs are evaluated for the small-molecule ligand in the presence of the electric field induced by the protein, solvent, and ion charges within the MD snapshot. Partial charges on ligand atom centers are fit through the multi-conformer restrained electrostatic potential (RESP) fit method on several successive ESPs. The RESP method was selected since it produces charges consistent with the AMBER/GAFF force-field used in the simulations. The updated charges are introduced back into the running simulation when the next snapshot is saved. The result is a simulation whose ligand partial charges continuously respond in real-time to the short-term mean electrostatic field of the evolving environment without incurring additional wall-clock time. We show that (1) by incorporating the cost of polarization back into the potential energy of the MD simulation, the algorithm conserves energy when run in the microcanonical ensemble and (2) the mean solvation free energies for 15 neutral amino acid side chains calculated with the quantum polarized fluctuating charge method and thermodynamic integration agree better with experiment relative to the Amber fixed charge force-field.  相似文献   

12.
In molecular simulations with fixed-charge force fields, the choice of partial atomic charges influences numerous computed physical properties, including binding free energies. Many molecular mechanics force fields specify how nonbonded parameters should be determined, but various choices are often available for how these charges are to be determined for arbitrary small molecules. Here, we compute hydration free energies for a set of 44 small, neutral molecules in two different explicit water models (TIP3P and TIP4P-Ew) to examine the influence of charge model on agreement with experiment. Using the AMBER GAFF force field for nonbonded parameters, we test several different methods for obtaining partial atomic charges, including two fast methods exploiting semiempirical quantum calculations and methods deriving charges from the electrostatic potentials computed with several different levels of ab initio quantum calculations with and without a continuum reaction field treatment of solvent. We find that the best charge sets give a root-mean-square error from experiment of roughly 1 kcal/mol. Surprisingly, agreement with experimental hydration free energies does not increase substantially with increasing level of quantum theory, even when the quantum calculations are performed with a reaction field treatment to better model the aqueous phase. We also find that the semiempirical AM1-BCC method for computing charges works almost as well as any of the more computationally expensive ab initio methods and that the root-mean-square error reported here is similar to that for implicit solvent models reported in the literature. Further, we find that the discrepancy with experimental hydration free energies grows substantially with the polarity of the compound, as does its variation across theory levels.  相似文献   

13.
To compensate for the lack of the explicit treatment of charge penetration in classical force fields, we propose a new charge‐distribution model based on a promolecule augmented with point charges (aug‐PROmol). It relies on a superposition of spherical atomic electron densities obtained for each chemical element from SCF energy optimized atomic orbitals. Atomic densities are further rescaled by partial point charges computed from fits to the molecular electrostatic potential. Aug‐PROmol was tested on the S66 benchmark dataset extended to nonequilibrium geometries (J. Chem. Theory Comput., 2011, 7, 3466). The model does not need any additional parametrization other than point charges. Despite its simplicity, aug‐PROmol approximates the electrostatic energy with good agreement (RMSE=0.76 kcal mol?1 to DFT‐SAPT with B3LYP/aug‐cc‐pVTZ).  相似文献   

14.
The Thole induced point dipole model is combined with three different point charge fitting methods, Merz–Kollman (MK), charges from electrostatic potentials using a grid (CHELPG), and restrained electrostatic potential (RESP), and two multipole algorithms, distributed multipole analysis (DMA) and Gaussian multipole model (GMM), which can be used to describe the electrostatic potential (ESP) around molecules in molecular mechanics force fields. This is done to study how the different methods perform when intramolecular polarizability contributions are self‐consistently removed from the fitting done in the force field parametrization. It is demonstrated that the polarizable versions of the partial charge models provide a good compromise between accuracy and computational efficiency in describing the ESP of small organic molecules undergoing conformational changes. For the point charge models, the inclusion of polarizability reduced the the average root mean square error of ESP over the test set by 4–10%. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

15.
Free energies of hydration (FEH) have been computed for 13 neutral and nine ionic species as a difference of theoretically calculated Gibbs free energies in solution and in the gas phase. In‐solution calculations have been performed using both SCIPCM and PCM polarizable continuum models at the density functional theory (DFT)/B3LYP and ab initio Hartree–Fock levels with two basis sets (6‐31G* and 6‐311++G**). Good linear correlation has been obtained for calculated and experimental gas‐phase dipole moments, with an increase by ~30% upon solvation due to solute polarization. The geometry distortion in solution turns out to be small, whereas solute polarization energies are up to 3 kcal/mol for neutral molecules. Calculation of free energies of hydration with PCM provides a balanced set of values with 6‐31G* and 6‐311++G** basis sets for neutral molecules and ionic species, respectively. Explicit solvent calculations within Monte Carlo simulations applying free energy perturbation methods have been considered for 12 neutral molecules. Four different partial atomic charge sets have been studied, obtained by a fit to the gas‐phase and in‐solution molecular electrostatic potentials at in‐solution optimized geometries. Calculated FEH values depend on the charge set and the atom model used. Results indicate a preference for the all‐atom model and partial charges obtained by a fit to the molecular electrostatic potential of the solute computed at the SCIPCM/B3LYP/6‐31G* level. © 2004 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Int J Quantum Chem, 2004  相似文献   

16.
17.
This article compares molecular properties and atomic properties defined by the quantum theory of atoms in molecules (QTAIM) obtained from three underlying levels of theory: MP2(full), density functional theory (DFT) (B3LYP), and Hartree‐Fock (H‐F). The same basis set (6‐311++G(d,p)) has been used throughout the study. The calculations and comparisons were applied to a set of 30 small molecules representing common fragments of biological molecules. The molecular properties investigated are the energies and the electrostatic moments (up to and including the quadrupoles), and the atomic properties include electron populations (and atomic charge), atomic dipolar and quadrupolar polarizations, atomic volumes, and corrected and raw atomic energies. The Cartesian distance between dipole vectors and the Frobenius distance between the quadrupole tensors calculated at the three levels of theory provide a measure of their correlation (or lack thereof). With the exception of energies (atomic and molecular), it is found that both DFT and H‐F are in excellent agreement with MP2, especially with regards to the electrostatic mutipoles up to the quadrupoles, but DFT and MP2 agree better in almost all studied properties (with the exception of molecular geometries). QTAIM properties whether obtained from H‐F, DFT(B3LYP), or MP2 calculations when used in the construction of empirical correlations with experiment such as quantitative structure‐activity‐(or property)‐relationships (QSAR/QSPR) are equivalent (because the properties calculated at the three levels are very highly correlated among themselves with r2 typically >0.95, and therefore preserving trends). These results suggest that the massive volume of results that were published in the older literature at the H‐F level is valid especially when used to study trends or in QSAR or QSPR studies, and, as long as our test set of molecules is representative, there is no pressing need to re‐evaluate them at other levels of theory except when inadequate basis sets were used by today's standards. Extensive tabulation of molecular and atomic properties at the three theoretical levels is available in the Supporting Information, including optimized geometries, molecular energies, virial ratios, molecular electrostatic moments up to and including hexadecapoles, atomic populations, atomic volumes, atomic electrostatic moments up to and including the quadrupoles, and atomic energies. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Comput Chem, 2010  相似文献   

18.
Scaling factors for atomic charges derived from the RM1 semiempirical quantum mechanical wavefunction in conjunction with CM1 and CM3 charge models have been optimized by minimizing errors in absolute free energies of hydration, ΔGhyd, for a set of 40 molecules. Monte Carlo statistical mechanics simulations and free energy perturbation theory were used to annihilate the solutes in gas and in a box of TIP4P water molecules. Lennard–Jones parameters from the optimized potentials for liquid simulations‐all atom (OPLS–AA) force field were utilized for the organic compounds. Optimal charge scaling factors have been determined as 1.11 and 1.14 for the CM1R and CM3R methods, respectively, and the corresponding unsigned average errors in ΔGhyd relative to experiment were 2.05 and 1.89 kcal/mol. Computed errors in aniline and two derivatives were particularly large for RM1 and their removal from the data set lowered the overall errors to 1.61 and 1.75 kcal/mol for CM1R and CM3R. Comparisons are made to the AM1 method which yielded total errors in ΔGhyd of 1.50 and 1.64 kcal/mol for CM1A*1.14 and CM3A*1.15, respectively. This work is motivated by the need for a highly efficient yet accurate quantum mechanical (QM) method to study condensed‐phase and enzymatic chemical reactions via mixed QM and molecular mechanical (QM/MM) simulations. As an initial test, the Menshutkin reaction between NH3 and CH3Cl in water was computed using a RM1/TIP4P‐Ew/CM3R procedure and the resultant ΔG?, ΔGrxn, and geometries were in reasonable accord with other computational methods; however, some potentially serious shortcomings in RM1 are discussed. © 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Comput Chem, 2011  相似文献   

19.
To correctly analyze the effects of general anesthetics on their potential targets by large‐scale molecular simulation, the structural parameters and partial atomic charges of the anesthetics are of determinant importance. Geometric optimizations using the Hartree–Fock and the B3LYP density functional theory methods with the large 6‐311+G(2d,p) basis set were performed to determine the structures and charge distributions of two halogenated anesthetics, 2‐bromo‐2‐chloro‐1,1,1‐trifluoroethane (halothane) and fluoromethyl‐2,2,2,‐trifluoro‐1‐(trifluoromethyl) ethyl ether (sevoflurane). The calculated bond lengths and angles are within 3% of the corresponding experimental values reported for the similar molecular groups. Charges are assigned using the Mulliken population analysis and the electrostatic potential (ESP) based on the Merz–Kollman–Singh scheme. The atoms‐in‐molecules (AIM) theory is also used to assign the charges in halothane. The dipole moments calculated with the Mulliken population analysis and ESP for the structures optimized by B3LYP/6‐311+(2d,p) were respectively 1.355 and 1.430 D for halothane and 2.255 and 2.315 D for sevoflurane. These are in excellent agreement with the experimental values of 1.41 and 2.33 D for halothane and sevoflurane, respectively. The calculated structures and partial charge distributions can be readily parameterized for molecular mechanics and molecular dynamics simulations involving these halogenated agents. © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Comput Chem 22: 436–444, 2001  相似文献   

20.
A neutral, nonpolar monolithic capillary column was evaluated as a hydrophobic stationary phase in pressurized CEC system for neutral, acidic and basic solutes. The monolith was prepared by in situ copolymerization of octadecyl methacrylate and ethylene dimethacrylate in a binary porogenic solvent consisting of cyclohexanol/1,4‐butanediol. EOF in this hydrophobic monolithic column was poor; even the pH value of the mobile phase was high. Because of the absence of fixed charges, the monolithic capillary column was free of electrostatic interactions with charged solutes. Separations of neutral solutes were based on the hydrophobic mechanism with the pressure as the driving force. The acidic and basic solutes were separated under pressurized CEC mode with the pressure and electrophoretic mobility as the driving force. The separation selectivity of charged solutes were based on their differences in electrophoretic mobility and hydrophobic interaction with the stationary phase, and no obvious peak tailing for basic analytes was observed. Effects of the mobile phase compositions on the retention of acidic compounds were also investigated. Under optimized conditions, high plate counts reaching 82 000 plates/m for neutral compounds, 134 000 plates/m for acid compounds and 150 000 plates/m for basic compounds were readily obtained.  相似文献   

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