posted on 2012-07-10, 00:00authored byVytautas Gapsys, Daniel Seeliger, Bert L. de Groot
The fields of rational drug design and protein engineering
benefit
from accurate free energy calculations based on molecular dynamics
simulations. A thermodynamic integration scheme is often used to calculate
changes in the free energy of a system by integrating the change of
the system’s Hamiltonian with respect to a coupling parameter.
These methods exploit nonphysical pathways over thermodynamic cycles
involving particle introduction and annihilation. Such alchemical
transitions require the modification of the classical nonbonded potential
energy terms by applying soft-core potential functions to avoid singularity
points. In this work, we propose a novel formulation for a soft-core
potential to be applied in nonequilibrium free energy calculations
that alleviates singularities, numerical instabilities, and additional
minima in the potential energy for all combinations of nonbonded interactions
at all intermediate alchemical states. The method was validated by
application to (a) the free energy calculations of a closed thermodynamic
cycle, (b) the mutation influence on protein thermostability, (c)
calculations of small ligand solvation free energies, and (d) the
estimation of binding free energies of trypsin inhibitors. The results
show that the novel soft-core function provides a robust and accurate
general purpose solution to alchemical free energy calculations.