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      Kirkwood-Buff Integrals for Aqueous Urea Solutions Based upon the Quantum Chemical Electrostatic Potential and Interaction Energies.

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          Abstract

          Cosolvents, such as urea, affect protein folding and binding, and the solubility of solutes. The modeling of cosolvents has been facilitated significantly by the rigorous Kirkwood-Buff (KB) theory of solutions, which can describe structural thermodynamics over the entire composition range of aqueous cosolvent mixtures based only on the solution density and the KB integrals (KBIs), i.e., the net excess radial distribution functions from the bulk. Using KBIs to describe solution thermodynamics has given rise to a clear guideline that an accurate prediction of KBIs is equivalent to accurate modeling of cosolvents. Taking urea as an example, here we demonstrate that an improvement in the prediction of KBIs comes from an improved reproduction of high-level quantum chemical (QC) electrostatic potential and molecular pairwise interaction energies. This rational approach to the improvement of the KBI prediction stems from a comparison of existing force fields, AMOEBA, and the generalized AMBER force field, as well as the further optimization of the former to enable better agreement with QC interaction energies. Such improvements would pave the way toward a rational and systematic determination of the transferable force field parameters for a number of important small molecule cosolvents.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Phys Chem B
          The journal of physical chemistry. B
          American Chemical Society (ACS)
          1520-5207
          1520-5207
          August 11 2016
          : 120
          : 31
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Education Academy of Computational Life Sciences, Tokyo Institute of Technology , J3-141 4259 Nagatsuta-cho, Midori-ku, Yokohama 226-8501, Japan.
          [2 ] School of Life Science and Technology, Tokyo Institute of Technology , B-62 4259 Nagatsuta-cho, Midori-ku, Yokohama 226-8501, Japan.
          [3 ] York Structural Biology Laboratory, Department of Chemistry, University of York, Heslington , York YO10 5DD, United Kingdom.
          Article
          10.1021/acs.jpcb.6b05611
          27434200
          a1f8100b-76de-49c9-a400-31c41aa5e8c8
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