Correlation Engine 2.0
Clear Search sequence regions


  • amoeba (4)
  • factors (1)
  • help (1)
  • solvent (11)
  • Sizes of these terms reflect their relevance to your search.

    Computational simulation of biomolecules can provide important insights into protein design, protein-ligand binding interactions, and ab initio biomolecular folding, among other applications. Accurate treatment of the solvent environment is essential in such applications, but the use of explicit solvents can add considerable cost. Implicit treatment of solvent effects using a dielectric continuum model is an attractive alternative to explicit solvation since it is able to describe solvation effects without the inclusion of solvent degrees of freedom. Previously, we described the development and parameterization of implicit solvent models for small molecules. Here, we extend the parameterization of the generalized Kirkwood (GK) implicit solvent model for use with biomolecules described by the AMOEBA force field via the addition of corrections to the calculation of effective radii that account for interstitial spaces that arise within biomolecules. These include element-specific pairwise descreening scale factors, a short-range neck contribution to describe the solvent-excluded space between pairs of nearby atoms, and finally tanh-based rescaling of the overall descreening integral. We then apply the AMOEBA/GK implicit solvent to a set of ten proteins and achieve an average coordinate root mean square deviation for the experimental structures of 2.0 Å across 500 ns simulations. Overall, the continued development of implicit solvent models will help facilitate the simulation of biomolecules on mechanistically relevant timescales. © 2023 Author(s). Published under an exclusive license by AIP Publishing.

    Citation

    Rae A Corrigan, Andrew C Thiel, Jack R Lynn, Thomas L Casavant, Pengyu Ren, Jay W Ponder, Michael J Schnieders. A generalized Kirkwood implicit solvent for the polarizable AMOEBA protein model. The Journal of chemical physics. 2023 Aug 07;159(5)

    Expand section icon Mesh Tags

    Expand section icon Substances


    PMID: 37526158

    View Full Text