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Conformational entropy of biomolecules: beyond the quasi-harmonic approximation.
Author(s) -
Jorge Numata,
Michael Wan,
Ernst-Walter Knapp
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
genome informatics. international conference on genome informatics
Language(s) - English
DOI - 10.11234/gi1990.18.192
A method is presented to calculate thermodynamic conformational entropy of a biomolecule from molecular dynamics simulation. Principal component analysis (the quasi-harmonic approximation) provides the first decomposition of the correlations in particle motion. Entropy is calculated analytically as a sum of independent quantum harmonic oscillators. The largest classical eigenvalues tend to be more anharmonic and show statistical dependence beyond correlation. Their entropy is corrected using a numerical method from information theory: the k-nearest neighbor algorithm. The method calculates a tighter upper limit to entropy than the quasi-harmonic approximation and is likewise applicable to large solutes, such as peptides and proteins. Together with an estimate of solute enthalpy and solvent free energy from methods such as MMPB/SA, it can be used to calculate the free energy of protein folding as well as receptor-ligand binding constants.

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