posted on 2021-01-12, 23:30authored byThomas
J. Oweida, Ho Shin Kim, Johnny M. Donald, Abhishek Singh, Yaroslava G. Yingling
Single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) plays
an important role in biological
processes and is used in DNA nanotechnology and other novel applications.
Many important research questions can be addressed with molecular
simulations of ssDNA molecules; however, no dedicated force field
for ssDNA has been developed, and there is limited experimental information
about ssDNA structures. This study assesses the accuracy and applicability
of existing Amber force fields for all-atom simulations of ssDNA,
such as ff99, bsc0, bsc1, and OL15, in implicit and explicit solvents
via comparison to available experimental data, such as Forster resonance
energy transfer and small angle X-ray scattering. We observed that
some force fields agree better with experiments than others mainly
due to the difference in parameterization of the propensity for hydrogen
bonding and base stacking. Overall, the Amber ff99 force field in
the IGB5 or IGB8 implicit solvent and the bsc1 force field in the
explicit TIP3P solvent had the best agreement with experiment.