We present a GPU implementation of the continuous constant pH molecular dynamics (CpHMD) based on the most recent generalized Born implicit-solvent model in the engine of the Amber molecular dynamics package. To test the accuracy of the tool for rapid p predictions, a series of 2 ns single-pH simulations were performed for over 120 titratable residues in 10 benchmark proteins that were previously used to test the various continuous CpHMD methods. The calculated p's showed a root-mean-square deviation of 0.80 and correlation coefficient of 0.83 with respect to experiment. Also, 90% of the p's were converged with estimated errors below 0.1 pH units. Surprisingly, this level of accuracy is similar to our previous replica-exchange simulations with 2 ns per replica and an exchange attempt frequency of 2 ps (Huang, Harris, and Shen 2018 , 58 , 1372 - 1383 ). Interestingly, for the linked titration sites in two enzymes, although residue-specific protonation state sampling in the single-pH simulations was not converged within 2 ns, the protonation fraction of the linked residues appeared to be largely converged, and the experimental macroscopic p values were reproduced to within 1 pH unit. Comparison with replica-exchange simulations with different exchange attempt frequencies showed that the splitting between the two macroscopic p's is underestimated with frequent exchange attempts such as 2 ps, while single-pH simulations overestimate the splitting. The same trend is seen for the single-pH vs replica-exchange simulations of a hydrogen-bonded aspartyl dyad in a much larger protein. A 2 ns single-pH simulation of a 400-residue protein takes about 1 h on a single NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2080 graphics card, which is over 1000 times faster than a CpHMD run on a single CPU core of a high-performance computing cluster node. Thus, we envision that GPU-accelerated continuous CpHMD may be used in routine p predictions for a variety of applications, from assisting MD simulations with protonation state assignment to offering pH-dependent corrections of binding free energies and identifying reactive hot spots for covalent drug design.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6934042 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jcim.9b00754 | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!