UUCG RNA Tetraloop as a Formidable Force-Field Challenge
for MD Simulations
Posted on 2020-11-20 - 14:36
Explicit
solvent atomistic molecular dynamics (MD) simulations
represent an established technique to study structural dynamics of
RNA molecules and an important complement for diverse experimental
methods. However, performance of molecular mechanical (MM) force fields
(ff’s) remains far from satisfactory even after decades of
development, as apparent from a problematic structural description
of some important RNA motifs. Actually, some of the smallest RNA molecules
belong to the most challenging systems for MD simulations and, among
them, the UUCG tetraloop is saliently difficult. We report a detailed
analysis of UUCG MD simulations, depicting the sequence of events
leading to the loss of the UUCG native state during MD simulations.
The total amount of MD simulation data analyzed in this work is close
to 1.3 ms. We identify molecular interactions, backbone conformations,
and substates that are involved in the process. Then, we unravel specific
ff deficiencies using diverse quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical
(QM/MM) and QM calculations. Comparison between the MM and QM methods
shows discrepancies in the description of the 5′-flanking phosphate
moiety and both signature sugar–base interactions. Our work
indicates that poor behavior of the UUCG tetraloop in simulations
is a complex issue that cannot be attributed to one dominant and straightforwardly
correctable factor. Instead, there is a concerted effect of multiple
ff inaccuracies that are coupled and amplifying each other. We attempted
to improve the simulation behavior by some carefully tailored interventions,
but the results were still far from satisfactory, underlying the difficulties
in development of accurate nucleic acid ff’s.
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Mráziková, Klaudia; Mlýnský, Vojtěch; Kührová, Petra; Pokorná, Pavlína; Kruse, Holger; Krepl, Miroslav; et al. (2020). UUCG RNA Tetraloop as a Formidable Force-Field Challenge
for MD Simulations. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jctc.0c00801