Dipeptide Aggregation in Aqueous Solution from Fixed Point-Charge Force Fields
Author(s) -
Andreas W. Götz,
Denis Bucher,
Steffen Lindert,
J. Andrew McCammon
Publication year - 2014
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/ct401049q
Subject(s) - polarizability , aqueous solution , chemical physics , force field (fiction) , water model , dipeptide , polarization (electrochemistry) , molecule , point particle , molecular dynamics , statistical physics , biomolecule , chemistry , physics , materials science , computational chemistry , nanotechnology , classical mechanics , amino acid , quantum mechanics , biochemistry
The description of aggregation processes with molecular dynamics simulations is a playground for testing biomolecular force fields, including a new generation of force fields that explicitly describe electronic polarization. In this work, we study a system consisting of 50 glycyl-l-alanine (Gly-Ala) dipeptides in solution with 1001 water molecules. Neutron diffraction experiments have shown that at this concentration, Gly-Ala aggregates into large clusters. However, general-purpose force fields in combination with established water models can fail to correctly describe this aggregation process, highlighting important deficiencies in how solute-solute and solute-solvent interactions are parametrized in these force fields. We found that even for the fully polarizable AMOEBA force field, the degree of association is considerably underestimated. Instead, a fixed point-charge approach based on the newly developed IPolQ scheme [Cerutti et al. J. Phys. Chem. 2013 , 117 , 2328] allows for the correct modeling of the dipeptide aggregation in aqueous solution. This result should stimulate interest in novel fitting schemes that aim to improve the description of the solvent polarization effect within both explicitly polarizable and fixed point-charge frameworks.
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