posted on 2015-12-16, 22:16authored byJoshua T. Berryman, Tanja Schilling
Sets of free energy differences are useful for finding
the equilibria
of chemical reactions, while absolute free energies have little physical
meaning. However finding the relative free energy between two macrostates
by subtraction of their absolute free energies is a valuable strategy
in certain important cases. We present calculations of absolute free
energies of biomolecules, using a combination of the well-known Einstein
molecule method (for treating the solute) with a conceptually related
method of recent genesis for computing free energies of liquids (to
treat the solvent and counterions). The approach is based on thermodynamic
integration from a detailed atomistic model to one which is simplified
but analytically solvable, thereby giving the absolute free energy
as that of the tractable model plus a correction term found numerically.
An example calculation giving the free energy with respect to salt
concentration for the B- and Z-isomers of all-atom duplex DNA in explicit
solvent and counterions is presented. The coexistence salt concentration
is found with unprecedented accuracy.