posted on 2013-07-09, 00:00authored byLauren Wickstrom, Peng He, Emilio Gallicchio, Ronald M. Levy
Host–guest
inclusion complexes are useful models for understanding
the structural and energetic aspects of molecular recognition. Due
to their small size relative to much larger protein–ligand
complexes, converged results can be obtained rapidly for these systems
thus offering the opportunity to more reliably study fundamental aspects
of the thermodynamics of binding. In this work, we have performed
a large scale binding affinity survey of 57 β-cyclodextrin (CD)
host–guest systems using the binding energy distribution analysis
method (BEDAM) with implicit solvation (OPLS-AA/AGBNP2). Converged
estimates of the standard binding free energies are obtained for these
systems by employing techniques such as parallel Hamiltonian replica
exchange molecular dynamics, conformational reservoirs, and multistate
free energy estimators. Good agreement with experimental measurements
is obtained in terms of both numerical accuracy and affinity rankings.
Overall, average effective binding energies reproduce affinity rank
ordering better than the calculated binding affinities, even though
calculated binding free energies, which account for effects such as
conformational strain and entropy loss upon binding, provide lower
root-mean-square errors when compared to measurements. Interestingly,
we find that binding free energies are superior rank order predictors
for a large subset containing the most flexible guests. The results
indicate that, while challenging, accurate modeling of reorganization
effects can lead to ligand design models of superior predictive power
for rank ordering relative to models based only on ligand–receptor
interaction energies.