4.7 Article

Benchmarking a Fast Proton Titration Scheme in Implicit Solvent for Biomolecular Simulations

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL THEORY AND COMPUTATION
Volume 13, Issue 6, Pages 2915-2929

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jctc.6b01114

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Fundacao de Amparo a Pesquisa do Estado de sao Paulo [Fapesp 2015/16116-3]
  2. University College Dublin (UCD)
  3. University of sao Paulo through NAP-CatSinQ
  4. European Commission [676531]

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pH is a key parameter for technological and biological processes, intimately related to biomolecular charge. As such, it controls biomolecular conformation and intermolecular interactions, for example, protein/RNA stability and folding, enzyme activity, regulation through conformational switches, protein-polyelectrolyte association, and protein-RNA interactions. pH also plays an important role in technological systems in food, brewing, pharma, bioseparations, and biomaterials in general. Predicting the structure of large proteins and complexes remains a great challenge experimentally, industrially, and theoretically, despite the variety of numerical schemes available ranging from Poisson-Boltzmann approaches to explicit solvent based methods. In this work we benchmark a fast proton titration scheme against experiment and several theoretical methods on the following set of representative proteins: [HP36, BBL, HEWL (triclinic and orthorhombic), RNase, SNASE (V66K/WT, V66K/PHS, V66K/Delta+PHS, L38D/Delta+PHS, L38E/Delta+PHS, L38K/Delta+PHS), ALAC, and OMTKY3]; routinely used in similar tests due to the diversity of their structural features. Our scheme is rooted in the classical Tanford-Kirkwood model of impenetrable spheres, where salt is treated at the Debye-Huckel level. Treating salt implicitly dramatically reduces the computation time, thereby circumventing sampling difficulties faced by other numerical schemes. In comparison with experimental measurements, our calculated pK(a) values have the average, maximum absolute, and root-mean-square deviations of 0.4-0.9, 1.0-5.2, and 0.5-1.2 pH units, respectively. These values are within the ranges commonly observed in theoretical models. They are also in the large majority of the cases studied here more accurate than the NULL model. For BBL, ALAC, and OMTKY3, the predicted pKa are closer to experimental results than other analyzed theoretical data. Despite the intrinsic approximations of the fast titration scheme, its robustness and ability to properly describe the main system physics is confirmed.

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