4.7 Article

Perturbation Free-Energy Toolkit: An Automated Alchemical Topology Builder

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL INFORMATION AND MODELING
Volume 61, Issue 9, Pages 4382-4390

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jcim.1c00428

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Peter and Traudl Engelhorn Foundation Supporting Life Sciences Postdoctoral stipend

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Free-energy calculations are crucial in computational chemistry, but perturbation methods face challenges such as defining the perturbation path. The development of an automatic perturbation topology builder can enhance the accuracy of free-energy calculations and improve predictions of molecular transformations. This toolkit is available as an open-source Python package online, providing a valuable resource for researchers in the field.
Free-energy calculations play an important role in the application of computational chemistry to a range of fields, including protein biochemistry, rational drug design, or materials science. Importantly, the free-energy difference is directly related to experimentally measurable quantities such as partition and adsorption coefficients, water activity, and binding affinities. Among several techniques aimed at predicting free-energy differences, perturbation approaches, involving the alchemical transformation of one molecule into another through intermediate states, stand out as rigorous methods based on statistical mechanics. However, despite the importance of free-energy calculations, the applicability of the perturbation approaches is still largely impeded by a number of challenges, including the definition of the perturbation path, i.e., alchemical changes leading to the transformation of one molecule to the other. To address this, an automatic perturbation topology builder based on a graph-matching algorithm is developed, which can identify the maximum common substructure (MCS) of two or multiple molecules and provide the perturbation topologies suitable for free-energy calculations using the GROMOS and the GROMACS simulation packages. Various MCS search options are presented leading to alternative definitions of the perturbation pathway. Moreover, perturbation topologies generated using the default multistate MCS search are used to calculate the changes in free energy between lysine and its two post-translational modifications, 3-methyllysine and acetyllysine. The pairwise free-energy calculations performed on this test system led to a cycle closure of 0.5 +/- 0.3 and 0.2 +/- 0.2 kJ mol(-1), with GROMOS and GROMACS simulation packages, respectively. The same relative free energies between the three states are obtained by employing the enveloping distribution sampling (EDS) approach when compared to the pairwise perturbations. Importantly, this toolkit is made available online as an open source Python package (https://github.com/drazen-petrov/SMArt).

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