posted on 2016-02-05, 00:00authored byLevi N. Naden, Michael R. Shirts
We show how thermodynamic properties
of molecular models can be
computed over a large, multidimensional parameter space by combining
multistate reweighting analysis with a linear basis function approach.
This approach reduces the computational cost to estimate thermodynamic
properties from molecular simulations for over 130,000 tested parameter
combinations from over 1000 CPU years to tens of CPU days. This speed
increase is achieved primarily by computing the potential energy as
a linear combination of basis functions, computed from either modified
simulation code or as the difference of energy between two reference
states, which can be done without any simulation code modification.
The thermodynamic properties are then estimated with the Multistate
Bennett Acceptance Ratio (MBAR) as a function of multiple model parameters
without the need to define a priori how the states
are connected by a pathway. Instead, we adaptively sample a set of
points in parameter space to create mutual configuration space overlap.
The existence of regions of poor configuration space overlap are detected
by analyzing the eigenvalues of the sampled states’ overlap
matrix. The configuration space overlap to sampled states is monitored
alongside the mean and maximum uncertainty to determine convergence,
as neither the uncertainty or the configuration space overlap alone
is a sufficient metric of convergence. This adaptive sampling scheme
is demonstrated by estimating with high precision the solvation free
energies of charged particles of Lennard-Jones plus Coulomb functional
form with charges between −2 and +2 and generally physical
values of σij and ϵij in TIP3P water. We also compute entropy, enthalpy,
and radial distribution functions of arbitrary unsampled parameter
combinations using only the data from these sampled states and use
the estimates of free energies over the entire space to examine the
deviation of atomistic simulations from the Born approximation to
the solvation free energy.