4.7 Article

Coarse-Grained Force Fields from the Perspective of Statistical Mechanics: Better Understanding of the Origins of a MARTINI Hangover

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL THEORY AND COMPUTATION
Volume 17, Issue 2, Pages 1170-1180

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jctc.0c00638

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS) of the United States National Institutes of Health (NIH) under NIH [R01-GM063796]

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Using the MARTINI coarse-grained model as a test case, this study analyzes the adherence of top-down coarse-grained molecular dynamics models to the known features of statistical mechanics for all-atom representations. The MARTINI models do not completely capture the lipid structure seen in atomistic simulations, leading to issues of accuracy and temperature transferability. Differences are also observed in the association of embedded amphipathic helices and membrane height fluctuation between the MARTINI model and the all-atom simulations.
The popular MARTINI coarse-grained model is used as a test case to analyze the adherence of top-down coarse-grained molecular dynamics models (i.e., models primarily parametrized to match experimental results) to the known features of statistical mechanics for the underlying all-atom representations. Specifically, the temperature dependence of various pair distribution functions, and hence their underlying potentials of mean force via the reversible work theorem, are compared between MARTINI 2.0, Dry MARTINI, and all-atom simulations mapped onto equivalent coarse-grained sites for certain lipid bilayers. It is found that the MARTINI models do not completely capture the lipid structure seen in atomistic simulations as projected onto the coarse-grained mappings and that issues of accuracy and temperature transferability arise due to an incorrect enthalpy-entropy decomposition of these potentials of mean force. The potential of mean force for the association of two amphipathic helices in a lipid bilayer is also calculated, and especially at shorter ranges, the MARTINI and all-atom projection results differ substantially. The former is much less repulsive and hence will lead to a higher probability of MARTINI helix association in the MARTINI bilayer than occurs in the actual all-atom case. Additionally, the bilayer height fluctuation spectra are calculated for the MARTINI model, and compared to the all-atom results, it is found that the magnitude of thermally averaged amplitudes at intermediate length scales are quite different, pointing to a number of possible consequences for realistic modeling of membrane processes. Taken as a whole, the results presented here show disagreement in the enthalpic and entropic driving forces driving lateral structure in lipid bilayers as well as quantitative differences in association of embedded amphipathic helices, which can help direct future efforts to parametrize CG models with better agreement to the all-atom systems they aspire to represent.

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