Force Matching as a Stepping Stone to QM/MM CB[8] Host/Guest Binding Free Energies: A SAMPL6 Cautionary Tale

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

10-2018

Keywords

Host–guest, Force matching, Indirect free energy, SAMPL6

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

https://doi.org/10.1007/s10822-018-0165-3

Abstract

Use of quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical (QM/MM) methods in binding free energy calculations, particularly in the SAMPL challenge, often fail to achieve improvement over standard additive (MM) force fields. Frequently, the implementation is through use of reference potentials, or the so-called “indirect approach”, and inherently relies on sufficient overlap existing between MM and QM/MM configurational spaces. This overlap is generally poor, particularly for the use of free energy perturbation to perform the MM to QM/MM free energy correction at the end states of interest (e.g., bound and unbound states). However, by utilizing MM parameters that best reproduce forces obtained at the desired QM level of theory, it is possible to lessen the configurational disparity between MM and QM/MM. To this end, we sought to use force matching to generate MM parameters for the SAMPL6 CB[8] host–guest binding challenge, classically compute binding free energies, and apply energetic end state corrections to obtain QM/MM binding free energy differences. For the standard set of 11 molecules and the bonus set (including three additional challenge molecules), error statistics, such as the root mean square deviation (RMSE) were moderately poor (5.5 and 5.4 kcal/mol). Correlation statistics, however, were in the top two for both standard and bonus set submissions (R2 of 0.42 and 0.26, T of 0.64 and 0.47 respectively). High RMSE and moderate correlation strongly indicated the presence of systematic error. Identifiable issues were ameliorated for two of the guest molecules, resulting in a reduction of error and pointing to strong prospects for the future use of this methodology.

Was this content written or created while at USF?

Yes

Citation / Publisher Attribution

Journal of Computer-Aided Molecular Design, v. 32, p. 983-999

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