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Articles

Thermodynamics calculation of protein–ligand interactions by QM/MM polarizable charge parameters

, , , , &
Pages 163-176 | Received 15 Jan 2015, Accepted 12 Feb 2015, Published online: 11 Mar 2015
 

Abstract

The calculation of protein–ligand binding free energy (ΔG) is of great importance for virtual screening and drug design. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulation has been an attractive tool to investigate this scientific problem. However, the reliability of such approach is affected by many factors including electrostatic interaction calculation. Here, we present a practical protocol using quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics (QM/MM) calculations to generate polarizable QM protein charge (QMPC). The calculated QMPC of some atoms in binding pockets was obviously different from that calculated by AMBER ff03, which might significantly affect the calculated ΔG. To evaluate the effect, the MD simulations and MM/GBSA calculation with QMPC for 10 protein–ligand complexes, and the simulation results were then compared to those with the AMBER ff03 force field and experimental results. The correlation coefficient between the calculated ΔΔG using MM/GBSA under QMPC and the experimental data is .92, while that with AMBER ff03 force field is .47 for the complexes formed by streptavidin or its mutants and biotin. Moreover, the calculated ΔΔG with QMPC for the complexes formed by ERβ and five ligands is positively related to experimental result with correlation coefficient of .61, while that with AMBER ff03 charge is negatively related to experimental data with correlation coefficient of .42. The detailed analysis shows that the electrostatic polarization introduced by QMPC affects the electrostatic contribution to the binding affinity and thus, leads to better correlation with experimental data. Therefore, this approach should be useful to virtual screening and drug design.

Acknowledgments

The simulations were run at Shanghai Supercomputing Center (SSC) and TianHe 1 supercomputer in Tianjian.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (NNSFC) [grant number 21403283], [grant number 21373258], [grant number 21021063], [grant number 81273435]; Postdoctoral Science Foundation of China [grant number 2014M560362]; National 863 Program [grant number 2012AA01A305].

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