4.7 Article

Enhancing Ligand and Protein Sampling Using Sequential Monte Carlo

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL THEORY AND COMPUTATION
Volume 18, Issue 6, Pages 3894-3910

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jctc.1c01198

Keywords

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Funding

  1. AstraZeneca
  2. GSK
  3. Syngenta
  4. EPSRC [EP/V048864/1]
  5. Centre for Doctoral Training, Theory and Modelling in Chemical Sciences [EP/L015722/1]
  6. HECBioSim [EP/R029407/1]

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The sampling problem is a widely studied topic in computational chemistry. In this work, an alchemical variation of adaptive sequential Monte Carlo (SMC) is presented, and it is applied to various test cases, showing efficient exploration of targeted degrees of freedom. Alchemical SMC is a promising tool for preparatory exploration of systems.
The sampling problem is one of the most widely studied topics in computational chemistry. While various methods exist for sampling along a set of reaction coordinates, many require system-dependent hyperparameters to achieve maximum efficiency. In this work, we present an alchemical variation of adaptive sequential Monte Carlo (SMC), an irreversible importance resampling method that is part of a well-studied class of methods that have been used in various applications but have been underexplored in computational biophysics. Afterward, we apply alchemical SMC on a variety of test cases, including torsional rotations of solvated ligands (butene and a terphenyl derivative), translational and rotational movements of protein-bound ligands, and protein side chain rotation coupled to the ligand degrees of freedom (T4-lysozyme, protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B, and transforming growth factor beta). We find that alchemical SMC is an efficient way to explore targeted degrees of freedom and can be applied to a variety of systems using the same hyperparameters to achieve a similar performance. Alchemical SMC is a promising tool for preparatory exploration of systems where long-timescale sampling of the entire system can be traded off against short-timescale sampling of a particular set of degrees of freedom over a population of conformers.

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