Although current AMBER force fields are relatively accurate for canonical B-DNA, many noncanonical structures are still described incorrectly. As noncanonical motifs are attracting increasing attention due to the role they play in living organisms, further improvement is desirable. Here, we have chosen the Z-DNA molecule, which can be considered a touchstone of the universality of empirical force fields, since the noncanonical α and γ backbone conformations native to Z-DNA are also found in protein-DNA complexes, i-motif DNA, and other noncanonical DNAs. We show that spurious α/γ conformations occurring in simulations with current AMBER force fields, OL15 and bsc1, are largely due to inaccurate α/γ parametrization. Moreover, stabilization of native Z-DNA substates involving γ = trans conformations appears to be in conflict with the correct description of the canonical B-DNA structure. Because the balance of the native and spurious conformations is influenced by nonadditive effects, this is a difficult case for an additive dihedral energy scheme such as AMBER. We propose new α/γ parameters, denoted OL21, and show that they improve the stability of native α/γ Z-DNA substates while keeping the canonical DNA description virtually unchanged, thus representing a reasonable compromise within the additive force field framework. Although further extensive testing is needed, the new modification appears to be a promising step toward a more reliable description of noncanonical DNA motifs and provides the best performance for Z-DNA molecules among current AMBER force fields.
- MeSH
- B-DNA chemie MeSH
- konformace nukleové kyseliny MeSH
- simulace molekulární dynamiky MeSH
- Z-DNA * MeSH
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
Hybrid QM/MM methods combine the rigor of quantum mechanical (QM) calculations with the low computational cost of empirical molecular mechanical (MM) treatment allowing to capture dynamic properties to probe critical atomistic details of enzyme reactions. Catalysis by RNA enzymes (ribozymes) has only recently begun to be addressed with QM/MM approaches and is thus still a field under development. This review surveys methodology as well as recent advances in QM/MM applications to RNA mechanisms, including those of the HDV, hairpin, and hammerhead ribozymes, as well as the ribosome. We compare and correlate QM/MM results with those from QM and/or molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, and discuss scope and limitations with a critical eye on current shortcomings in available methodologies and computer resources. We thus hope to foster mutual appreciation and facilitate collaboration between experimentalists and theorists to jointly advance our understanding of RNA catalysis at an atomistic level.
- MeSH
- biofyzika metody MeSH
- fosfáty chemie MeSH
- fosforylace MeSH
- hořčík chemie MeSH
- katalýza MeSH
- konformace nukleové kyseliny MeSH
- kvantová teorie MeSH
- lidé MeSH
- molekulární modely MeSH
- počítačová simulace MeSH
- ribozomy chemie MeSH
- RNA katalytická chemie MeSH
- RNA virová chemie MeSH
- RNA chemie MeSH
- software MeSH
- Check Tag
- lidé MeSH
- Publikační typ
- práce podpořená grantem MeSH
- přehledy MeSH
- Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural MeSH
Stabilisation energies of stacked structures of C(6)H(6)...C(6)X(6) (X = F, Cl, Br, CN) complexes were determined at the CCSD(T) complete basis set (CBS) limit level. These energies were constructed from MP2/CBS stabilisation energies and a CCSD(T) correction term determined with a medium basis set (6-31G**). The former energies were extrapolated using the two-point formula of Helgaker et al. from aug-cc-pVDZ and aug-cc-pVTZ Hartree-Fock energies and MP2 correlation energies. The CCSD(T) correction term is systematically repulsive. The final CCSD(T)/CBS stabilisation energies are large, considerably larger than previously calculated and increase in the series as follows: hexafluorobenzene (6.3 kcal mol(-1)), hexachlorobenzene (8.8 kcal mol(-1)), hexabromobenzene (8.1 kcal mol(-1)) and hexacyanobenzene (11.0 kcal mol(-1)). MP2/SDD** relativistic calculations performed for all complexes mentioned and also for benzene[dot dot dot]hexaiodobenzene have clearly shown that due to relativistic effects the stabilisation energy of the hexaiodobenzene complex is lower than that of hexabromobenzene complex. The decomposition of the total interaction energy to physically defined energy components was made by using the symmetry adapted perturbation treatment (SAPT). The main stabilisation contribution for all complexes investigated is due to London dispersion energy, with the induction term being smaller. Electrostatic and induction terms which are attractive are compensated by their exchange counterparts. The stacked motif in the complexes studied is very stable and might thus be valuable as a supramolecular synthon.
Resolution of identity standard density functional theory augmented with a damped empirical dispersion term (RI-DFT-D) calculations have been carried out on a set of lowest energy minima of tryptophyl-glycine (Trp-Gly) and tryptophyl-glycyl-glycine (Trp-Gly-Gly) peptides. RI-DFT-D (TPSS/TZVP) results are in excellent agreement with benchmark data based on the CCSD(T) method. Experimental spectra could be assigned according to the calculated IR frequencies. Central processing unit (CPU) time requirements are only slightly higher than those needed for the DFT calculations. Consequently, RI-DFT-D theory seems to be a promising methodology for studying oligopeptides with accuracy comparable to ab initio quantum chemical calculations.
Aromatic ring-peptide bond interactions (modeled as benzene and formamide, N-methylformamide and N-methylacetamide) are studied by means of advanced computational chemistry methods: second-order Moller-Plesset (MP2), coupled-cluster single and double excitation model [CCSD(T)], and density functional theory with dispersion (DFT-D). The geometrical preferences of these interactions as well as their interaction energy content, in both parallel and T-shaped arrangements, are investigated. The stabilization energy reaches a value of over 5 kcal/mol for the N-methylformamide-benzene complex at the CCSD(T)/complete basis set (CBS) level. Decomposition of interaction energy by the DFT-symmetry-adapted perturbation treatment (SAPT) technique shows that the parallel and T-shaped arrangements, although similar in their total interaction energies, differ significantly in the proportion of electrostatic and dispersion terms.
MP2 and CCSD(T) complete basis set (CBS) limit interaction energies and geometries for more than 100 DNA base pairs, amino acid pairs and model complexes are for the first time presented together. Extrapolation to the CBS limit is done by using two-point extrapolation methods and different basis sets (aug-cc-pVDZ - aug-cc-pVTZ, aug-cc-pVTZ - aug-cc-pVQZ, cc-pVTZ - cc-pVQZ) are utilized. The CCSD(T) correction term, determined as a difference between CCSD(T) and MP2 interaction energies, is evaluated with smaller basis sets (6-31G** and cc-pVDZ). Two sets of complex geometries were used, optimized or experimental ones. The JSCH-2005 benchmark set, which is now available to the chemical community, can be used for testing lower-level computational methods. For the first screening the smaller training set (S22) containing 22 model complexes can be recommended. In this case larger basis sets were used for extrapolation to the CBS limit and also CCSD(T) and counterpoise-corrected MP2 optimized geometries were sometimes adopted.
Base-stacking energies in ten unique B-DNA base-pair steps and some other arrangements were evaluated by the second-order Moller-Plesset (MP2) method, complete basis set (CBS) extrapolation, and correction for triple (T) electron-correlation contributions. The CBS(T) calculations were compared with decade-old MP2/6-31G*(0.25) reference data and AMBER force field. The new calculations show modest increases in stacking stabilization compared to the MP2/6-31G*(0.25) data and surprisingly large sequence-dependent variation of stacking energies. The absolute force-field values are in better agreement with the new reference data, while relative discrepancies between quantum-chemical (QM) and force-field values increase modestly. Nevertheless, the force field provides good qualitative description of stacking, and there is no need to introduce additional pair-additive electrostatic terms, such as distributed multipoles or out-of-plane charges. There is a rather surprising difference of about 0.1 A between the vertical separation of base pairs predicted by quantum chemistry and derived from crystal structures. Evaluations of different local arrangements of the 5'-CG-3' step indicate a sensitivity of the relative stacking energies to the level of calculation. Thus, describing quantitative relations between local DNA geometrical variations and stacking may be more complicated than usually assumed. The reference calculations are complemented by continuum-solvent assessment of solvent-screening effects.