Protein-ligand docking using hamiltonian replica exchange simulations with soft core potentials.

J Chem Inf Model

Physik-Department T38, Technische Universität München, James Franck Str. 1, 85748 Garching, Germany.

Published: June 2014

AI Article Synopsis

  • Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations help study how ligands bind to receptors, but often get stuck in non-optimal configurations due to local stability.
  • A new Hamiltonian replica-exchange (H-REMD) protocol improves this by allowing better exploration of ligand-receptor complexes through modified interactions in simulated replicas.
  • The H-REMD method has proven more efficient than standard MD, quickly achieving known binding geometries and potentially identifying alternative binding conformations with minimal energy differences.

Article Abstract

Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations in explicit solvent allow studying receptor-ligand binding processes including full flexibility of the binding partners and an explicit inclusion of solvation effects. However, in MD simulations, the search for an optimal ligand-receptor complex geometry is frequently trapped in locally stable non-native binding geometries. A Hamiltonian replica-exchange (H-REMD)-based protocol has been designed to enhance the sampling of putative ligand-receptor complexes. It is based on softening nonbonded ligand-receptor interactions along the replicas and one reference replica under the control of the original force field. The efficiency of the method has been evaluated on two receptor-ligand systems and one protein-peptide complex. Starting from misplaced initial docking geometries, the H-REMD method reached in each case the known binding geometry significantly faster than a standard MD simulation. The approach could also be useful to identify and evaluate alternative binding geometries in a given binding region with small relative differences in binding free energy.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/ci500296fDOI Listing

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