4.3 Article

Comparison of multiple amber force fields and development of improved protein backbone parameters

Journal

PROTEINS-STRUCTURE FUNCTION AND BIOINFORMATICS
Volume 65, Issue 3, Pages 712-725

Publisher

WILEY-LISS
DOI: 10.1002/prot.21123

Keywords

trialanine; dihedral parameters; molecular dynamics; molecular mechanics; decoy analysis; NMR order parameters; alpha-helix

Funding

  1. NIGMS NIH HHS [R01 GM061678, GM6167803, R01 GM061678-06A1] Funding Source: Medline

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The ff94 force field that is commonly associated with the Amber simulation package is one of the most widely used parameter sets for biomolecular simulation. After a decade of extensive use and testing, limitations in this force field, such as over-stabilization of alpha-helices, were reported by us and other researchers. This led to a number of attempts to improve these parameters, resulting in a variety of Amber force fields and significant difficulty in determining which should be used for a particular application. We show that several of these continue to suffer from inadequate balance between different secondary structure elements. In addition, the approach used in most of these studies neglected to account for the existence in Amber of two sets of backbone psi/psi dihedral terms. This led to parameter sets that provide unreasonable conformational preferences for glycine. We report here an effort to improve the psi/psi dihedral terms in the ff99 energy function. Dihedral term parameters are based on fitting the energies of multiple conformations of glycine and alanine tetrapeptides from high level ab initio quantum mechanical calculations. The new parameters for backbone dihedrals replace those in the existing ff99 force field. This parameter set, which we denote ff99SB, achieves a better balance of secondary structure elements as judged by improved distribution of backbone dihedrals for glycine and alanine with respect to PDB survey data. It also accomplishes improved agreement with published experimental data for conformational preferences of short alanine peptides and better accord with experimental NMR relaxation data of test protein systems.

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