Capturing the Effects of Explicit Waters in Implicit Electrostatics Modeling: Qualitative Justification of Gaussian-Based Dielectric Models in DelPhi.

J Chem Inf Model

Computational Biophysics and Bioinformatics, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Clemson University, Clemson, South Carolina 29634, United States.

Published: April 2020

Our group has implemented a smooth Gaussian-based dielectric function in DelPhi ( (4), 2126-2136) which models the solute as an object with inhomogeneous dielectric permittivity and provides a smooth transition of dielectric permittivity from surface-bound water to bulk solvent. Although it is well-understood that the protein hydrophobic core is less polarizable than the hydrophilic protein surface, less attention is paid to the polarizability of water molecules inside the solute and on its surface. Here, we apply explicit water simulations to study the behavior of water molecules buried inside a protein and on the surface of that protein and contrast it with the behavior of the bulk water. We selected a protein that is experimentally shown to have five cavities, most of which are occupied by water molecules. We demonstrate through molecular dynamics (MD) simulations that the behavior of water in the cavity is drastically different from that in the bulk. These observations were made by comparing the mean residence times, dipole orientation relaxation times, and average dipole moment fluctuations. We also show that the bulk region has a nonuniform distribution of these tempo-spatial properties. From the perspective of continuum electrostatics, we argue that the dielectric "constant" in water-filled cavities of proteins and the space close to the molecular surface should differ from that assigned to the bulk water. This provides support for the Gaussian-based smooth dielectric model for solving electrostatics in the Poisson-Boltzmann equation framework. Furthermore, we demonstrate that using a well-parametrized Gaussian-based model with a single energy-minimized configuration of a protein can also reproduce its ensemble-averaged polar solvation energy. Thus, we argue that the Gaussian-based smooth dielectric model not only captures accurate physics but also provides an efficient way of computing ensemble-averaged quantities.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9883665PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jcim.0c00151DOI Listing

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