Wang, Meiting Mei, Ye Ryde, Ulf Predicting Relative Binding Affinity Using Nonequilibrium QM/MM Simulations Calculating binding free energies with quantum-mechanical (QM) methods is notoriously time-consuming. In this work, we studied whether such calculations can be accelerated by using nonequilibrium (NE) molecular dynamics simulations employing Jarzynski’s equality. We studied the binding of nine cyclic carboxylate ligands to the octa-acid deep-cavity host from the SAMPL4 challenge with the reference potential approach. The binding free energies were first calculated at the molecular mechanics (MM) level with free energy perturbation using the generalized Amber force field with restrained electrostatic potential charges for the host and the ligands. Then the free energy corrections for going from the MM Hamiltonian to a hybrid QM/MM Hamiltonian were estimated by averaging over many short NE molecular dynamics simulations. In the QM/MM calculations, the ligand was described at the semiempirical PM6-DH+ level. We show that this approach yields MM → QM/MM free energy corrections that agree with those from other approaches within statistical uncertainties. The desired precision can be obtained by running a proper number of independent NE simulations. For the systems studied in this work, a total simulation length of 20 ps was appropriate for most of the ligands, and 36–324 simulations were necessary in order to reach a precision of 0.3 kJ/mol. energy corrections;cyclic carboxylate ligands;calculation;Amber force field;SAMPL 4 challenge;binding;PM 6-DH level;octa-acid deep-cavity host;NE;Relative Binding Affinity;approach;precision;MM;dynamics simulations;QM 2018-10-26
    https://acs.figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Predicting_Relative_Binding_Affinity_Using_Nonequilibrium_QM_MM_Simulations/7315214
10.1021/acs.jctc.8b00685.s001