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Download fileThe Role of Electrostatics in Enzymes: Do Biomolecular Force Fields Reflect Protein Electric Fields?
journal contribution
posted on 14.05.2020, 04:13 authored by Richard T. Bradshaw, Jacek Dziedzic, Chris-Kriton Skylaris, Jonathan W. EssexPreorganization
of large, directionally oriented, electric fields
inside protein active sites has been proposed as a crucial contributor
to catalytic mechanism in many enzymes, and it may be efficiently
investigated at the atomistic level with molecular dynamics simulations.
Here, we evaluate the ability of the AMOEBA polarizable force field,
as well as the additive Amber ff14SB and Charmm C36m models, to describe
the electric fields present inside the active site of the peptidyl-prolyl
isomerase cyclophilin A. We compare the molecular mechanical electric
fields to those calculated with a fully first-principles quantum mechanical
(QM) representation of the protein, solvent, and ions, and find that
AMOEBA consistently shows far greater correlation with the QM electric
fields than either of the additive force fields tested. Catalytically
relevant fields calculated with AMOEBA were typically smaller than
those observed with additive potentials, but were generally consistent
with an electrostatically driven mechanism for catalysis. Our results
highlight the accuracy and the potential advantages of using polarizable
force fields in systems where accurate electrostatics may be crucial
for providing mechanistic insights.