A New Lipid Force Field (FUJI)
Author(s) -
Nozomu Kamiya,
Megumi Kayanuma,
Hideaki Fujitani,
Keiko Shinoda
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of chemical theory and computation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.001
H-Index - 185
eISSN - 1549-9626
pISSN - 1549-9618
DOI - 10.1021/acs.jctc.9b01195
Subject(s) - force field (fiction) , lipid bilayer , molecular dynamics , dihedral angle , chemistry , van der waals force , chemical physics , molecule , computational chemistry , molecular physics , membrane , physics , hydrogen bond , organic chemistry , quantum mechanics , biochemistry
To explore inhomogeneous and anisotropic systems such as lipid bilayers, the Lennard-Jones particle mesh Ewald (LJ-PME) method has been applied without a conventional isotropic dispersion correction. As the popular AMBER and CHARMM lipid force fields were developed using a cutoff scheme, their lipid bilayers unacceptably shrink when using the LJ-PME method. In this study, a new all-atom lipid force field (FUJI) was developed on the basis of the AMBER force-field scheme including the Lipid14 van der Waals parameters. Point charges were calculated using the restrained electrostatic potentials of many lipid conformers. Further, torsion energy profiles were calculated using high-level ab initio molecular orbitals (LCCSD(T)/Aug-cc-pVTZ//LMP2/Aug-cc-pVTZ), following which the molecular mechanical dihedral parameters were derived through a fast Fourier transform. By incorporation of these parameters into a new lipid force field without fitting experimental data, the desired lipid characteristics such as the area per lipid and lateral diffusion coefficients were obtained through GROMACS molecular dynamics simulations using the LJ-PME method and virtual hydrogen sites. The calculated area per lipid and lateral diffusion coefficients showed satisfactory agreement with experimental data. Furthermore, the electron-density profiles along the membrane normal were calculated for pure lipid bilayers, and the resulting membrane thicknesses agreed well with the experimental values. As the new lipid force field is compatible with FUJI for protein and small molecules, the new FUJI force field will offer accurate modeling for complex systems consisting of various membrane proteins and lipids.
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