MARTINI-Compatible Coarse-Grained Model for the Mesoscale Simulation of Peptoids
Author(s) -
Mingfei Zhao,
Janani Sampath,
Sarah Alamdari,
Gillian Shen,
ChunLong Chen,
Christopher J. Mundy,
Jim Pfaendtner,
Andrew L. Ferguson
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
the journal of physical chemistry b
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.864
H-Index - 392
eISSN - 1520-6106
pISSN - 1520-5207
DOI - 10.1021/acs.jpcb.0c04567
Subject(s) - peptoid , force field (fiction) , chemistry , molecular dynamics , computational chemistry , peptidomimetic , combinatorial chemistry , peptide , computer science , biochemistry , artificial intelligence
Peptoids (poly-N-substituted glycines) are a class of synthetic polymers that are regioisomers of peptides (poly-C-substituted glycines), in which the point of side-chain connectivity is shifted from the backbone C to the N atom. Peptoids have found diverse applications as peptidomimetic drugs, protein mimetic polymers, surfactants, and catalysts. Computational modeling is valuable in the understanding and design of peptoid-based nanomaterials. In this work, we report the bottom-up parameterization of coarse-grained peptoid force fields based on the MARTINI peptide force field against all-atom peptoid simulation data. Our parameterization pipeline iteratively refits coarse-grained bonded interactions using iterative Boltzmann inversion and nonbonded interactions by matching the potential of mean force for chain extension. We assure good sampling of the amide bond cis/trans isomerizations in the all-atom simulation data using parallel bias metadynamics. We develop coarse-grained models for two representative peptoids-polysarcosine (poly( N -methyl glycine)) and poly( N -((4-bromophenyl)ethyl)glycine)-and show their structural and thermodynamic properties to be in excellent accord with all-atom calculations but up to 25-fold more efficient and compatible with MARTINI force fields. This work establishes a new rigorously parameterized coarse-grained peptoid force field for the understanding and design of peptoid nanomaterials at length and time scales inaccessible to all-atom calculations.
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