4.7 Article

Comparing the Performance of Different AMBER Protein Forcefields, Partial Charge Assignments, and Water Models for Absolute Binding Free Energy Calculations

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AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jctc.1c01208

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  1. Tri Institutional Therapeutics Discovery Institute (TDI)
  2. Takeda Pharmaceutical Company
  3. Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
  4. Rockefeller University
  5. Weill Cornell Medicine

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This paper presents an approach to alchemical binding free energies using OpenMM and evaluates the prediction accuracy using benchmark test sets. The findings highlight the effectiveness of some AMBER forcefields, particularly AMBER ff15ipq.
ABSTRACT: Identifying chemical starting points is a vital first step in small molecule drug discovery and can take significant time and money. For this reason, computational approaches to virtual screening are of great interest as they can lower the cost and shorten timeframes. However, simple approaches such as molecular docking and pharmacophore screening are of limited accuracy and provide a low probability of success. Alchemical binding free energies represent a promising approach for virtual screening as they naturally incorporate the key effects of water molecules, protein flexibility, and binding entropy. However, the calculations are technically very challenging, with performance depending on the specific forcefield used. For this reason, it is important that the community has access to benchmark test sets to assess prediction accuracy. In this paper, we present an approach to alchemical binding free energies using OpenMM. We identify effective simulation parameters using an existing BRD4(1) test set and present two new benchmark sets (cMET and PDE2A) that can be used in the community for validation purposes. Our findings also highlight the effectiveness of some AMBER forcefields, in particular, AMBER ff15ipq.

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