Peptide Bond Isomerization in High-Temperature Simulations
Version 2 2016-04-06, 18:54Version 2 2016-04-06, 18:54
Version 1 2016-03-15, 12:48Version 1 2016-03-15, 12:48
Posted on 2016-02-11 - 00:00
Force
fields for molecular simulation are generally optimized to
model macromolecules such as proteins at ambient temperature and pressure.
Nevertheless, elevated temperatures are frequently used to enhance
conformational sampling, either during system setup or as a component
of an advanced sampling technique such as temperature replica exchange.
Because macromolecular force fields are now put upon to simulate temperatures
and time scales that greatly exceed their original design specifications,
it is appropriate to re-evaluate whether these force fields are up
to the task. Here, we quantify the rates of peptide bond isomerization
in high-temperature simulations of three octameric peptides and a
small fast-folding protein. We show that peptide octamers with and
without proline residues undergo cis/trans isomerization every 1–5 ns at 800 K with three classical
atomistic force fields (AMBER99SB-ILDN, CHARMM22/CMAP, and OPLS-AA/L).
On the low microsecond time scale, these force fields permit isomerization
of nonprolyl peptide bonds at temperatures ≥500 K, and the
CHARMM22/CMAP force field permits isomerization of prolyl peptide
bonds ≥400 K. Moreover, the OPLS-AA/L force field allows chiral
inversion about the Cα atom at 800 K. Finally, we
show that temperature replica exchange permits cis peptide bonds developed at 540 K to subsequently migrate back to
the 300 K ensemble, where cis peptide bonds are present
in 2 ± 1% of the population of Trp-cage TC5b, including up to
4% of its folded state. Further work is required to assess the accuracy
of cis/trans isomerization in the
current generation of protein force fields.
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Neale, Chris; Pomès, Régis; García, Angel E. (2016). Peptide Bond Isomerization in High-Temperature Simulations. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jctc.5b01022