Can a continuum solvent model reproduce the free energy landscape of a β-hairpin folding in water?
Top Cited Papers
- 19 September 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 99 (20) , 12777-12782
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.142430099
Abstract
The folding free energy landscape of the C-terminal β-hairpin of protein G is explored using the surface-generalized Born (SGB) implicit solvent model, and the results are compared with the landscape from an earlier study with explicit solvent model. The OPLSAA force field is used for the β-hairpin in both implicit and explicit solvent simulations, and the conformational space sampling is carried out with a highly parallel replica-exchange method. Surprisingly, we find from exhaustive conformation space sampling that the free energy landscape from the implicit solvent model is quite different from that of the explicit solvent model. In the implicit solvent model some nonnative states are heavily overweighted, and more importantly, the lowest free energy state is no longer the native β-strand structure. An overly strong salt-bridge effect between charged residues (E42, D46, D47, E56, and K50) is found to be responsible for this behavior in the implicit solvent model. Despite this, we find that the OPLSAA/SGB energies of all the nonnative structures are higher than that of the native structure; thus the OPLSAA/SGB energy is still a good scoring function for structure prediction for this β-hairpin. Furthermore, the β-hairpin population at 282 K is found to be less than 40% from the implicit solvent model, which is much smaller than the 72% from the explicit solvent model and ≈80% from experiment. On the other hand, both implicit and explicit solvent simulations with the OPLSAA force field exhibit no meaningful helical content during the folding process, which is in contrast to some very recent studies using other force fields.Keywords
This publication has 32 references indexed in Scilit:
- β-hairpin folding simulations in atomistic detail using an implicit solvent model 1 1Edited by F. CohenJournal of Molecular Biology, 2001
- Generalized Born Models of Macromolecular Solvation EffectsAnnual Review of Physical Chemistry, 2000
- Molecular Dynamics Simulations of a Polyalanine Octapeptide under Ewald Boundary Conditions: Influence of Artificial Periodicity on Peptide ConformationThe Journal of Physical Chemistry B, 2000
- Replica-exchange molecular dynamics method for protein foldingChemical Physics Letters, 1999
- A molecular dynamics study of the 41‐56 β‐hairpin from B1 domain of protein GProtein Science, 1999
- Generalized Born Model Based on a Surface Integral FormulationThe Journal of Physical Chemistry B, 1998
- Monovalent and Divalent Salt Effects on Electrostatic Free Energies Defined by the Nonlinear Poisson−Boltzmann Equation: Application to DNA Binding ReactionsThe Journal of Physical Chemistry B, 1997
- Folding of Protein G B1 Domain Studied by the Conformational Characterization of Fragments Comprising Its Secondary Structure ElementsEuropean Journal of Biochemistry, 1995
- Semianalytical treatment of solvation for molecular mechanics and dynamicsJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1990
- Hybrid Monte CarloPhysics Letters B, 1987