AI Article Synopsis

  • The text discusses a new method for breaking down electronic interaction energies in complex systems, specifically through the use of fragment combination ranges (FCRs) and an additive decomposition approach.
  • It applies this method to a metalloenzyme-substrate complex, demonstrating that the method is adaptable to different systems while highlighting that errors in electronic structure are more significant than those from the fragmentation scheme itself.
  • The study also shows that the inclusion of three-body interaction terms improves results compared to traditional methods, and identifies strong interactions at the metal active site, specifically between the substrate and LPMO's copper site.

Article Abstract

We present a novel decomposition scheme for electronic interaction energies based on the flexible formulation of fragmentation schemes through fragment combination ranges (FCRs; , , , 164105). We devise a clear additive decomposition with contribution of nondisjoint fragments and correction terms for overlapping fragments and apply this scheme to the metalloenzyme-substrate complex of a lytic polysaccharide monooxygenase (LPMO) with an oligosaccharide. By this, we further illustrate the straightforward adaptability of the FCR-based schemes to novel systems. Our calculations suggest that the description of the electronic structure is a larger error source than the fragmentation scheme. In particular, we find a large impact of the basis set size on the interaction energies. Still, the introduction of three-body interaction terms in the fragmentation setup improves the agreement to the supermolecular reference. Yet, the qualitative results for the decomposition scheme with two-body terms only largely agree within the investigated electronic-structure approaches and basis sets, which are B97-3c, DFT (TPSS and B3LYP), and MP2 methods. The overlap contributions are found to be small, allowing analysis of the interaction energy into individual amino acid residues: We find a particularly strong interaction between the substrate and the LPMO copper active site.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.2c02883DOI Listing

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