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      A general purpose water model can improve atomistic simulations of intrinsically disordered proteins

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      Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation
      American Chemical Society (ACS)

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          Abstract

          <p class="first" id="d6035089e95">Unconstrained atomistic simulations of intrinsically disordered proteins and peptides (IDP) remain a challenge: widely used, "general purpose" water models tend to favor overly compact structures relative to experiment. Here we have performed a total of 93 μs of unrestrained MD simulations to explore, in the context of IDPs, a recently developed "general-purpose" 4-point rigid water model OPC, which describes liquid state of water close to experiment. We demonstrate that OPC, together with a popular AMBER force field ff99SB, offers a noticeable improvement over TIP3P in producing more realistic structural ensembles of three common IDPs benchmarks: 55-residue apo N-terminal zinc-binding domain of HIV-1 integrase ("protein IN"), amyloid β-peptide (Aβ42) (residues 1-42), and 26-reside H4 histone tail. As a negative control, computed folding profile of a regular globular miniprotein (CLN025) in OPC water is in appreciably better agreement with experiment than that obtained in TIP3P, which tends to overstabilize the compact native state relative to the extended conformations. We employed Aβ42 peptide to investigate the possible influence of the solvent box size on simulation outcomes. We advocate a cautious approach for simulations of IDPs: we suggest that the solvent box size should be at least four times the radius of gyration of the random coil corresponding to the IDP. The computed free energy landscape of protein IN in OPC resembles a shallow "tub" - conformations with substantially different degrees of compactness that are within 2 kB T of each other. Conformations with very different secondary structure content coexist within 1 kB T of the global free energy minimum. States with higher free energy tend to have less secondary structure. Computed low helical content of the protein has virtually no correlation with its degree of compactness, which calls into question the possibility of using the helicity as a metric for assessing performance of water models for IDPs, when the helicity is low. Predicted radius of gyration ( R g) of H4 histone tail in OPC water falls in-between that of a typical globular protein and a fully denatured protein of the same size; the predicted R g is consistent with two independent predictions. In contrast, H4 tail in TIP3P water is as compact as the corresponding globular protein. The computed free energy landscape of H4 tail in OPC is relatively flat over a significant range of compactness, which, we argue, is consistent with its biological function as facilitator of internucleosome interactions. </p>

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation
          J. Chem. Theory Comput.
          American Chemical Society (ACS)
          1549-9618
          1549-9626
          March 13 2019
          March 13 2019
          Article
          10.1021/acs.jctc.8b01123
          30865832
          643131c9-ce66-4dc9-aa55-23b4d08811ec
          © 2019
          History

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