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Prediction of octanol-water partition coefficients for the SAMPL6-logP molecules using molecular dynamics simulations with OPLS-AA, AMBER and CHARMM force fields

Authors :
Shujie Fan
Bogdan I. Iorga
Oliver Beckstein
Department of Physics, Arizona State University (ASU)
Arizona State University [Tempe] (ASU)
Institut de Chimie des Substances Naturelles (ICSN)
Institut de Chimie du CNRS (INC)-Université Paris-Saclay-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
Grants from National Institute Of General Medical Sciences of the National Institutes of Health under Awards Number R01GM118772 and R01GM125081.A grant DIM MAL-INF from the Région Ile- de-France.
ANR-11-IDEX-0003,IPS,Idex Paris-Saclay(2011)
ANR-14-JAMR-0002,DesInMBL,Structure-guided design of pan inhibitors of metallo-ß-lactamases(2014)
Source :
Journal of Computer-Aided Molecular Design, Journal of Computer-Aided Molecular Design, Springer Verlag, 2020, 34 (5), pp.543-560. ⟨10.1007/s10822-019-00267-z⟩, J Comput Aided Mol Des
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
HAL CCSD, 2020.

Abstract

All-atom molecular dynamics simulations with stratified alchemical free energy calculations were used to predict the octanol-water partition coefficient [Formula: see text] of eleven small molecules as part of the SAMPL6-[Formula: see text] blind prediction challenge using four different force field parametrizations: standard OPLS-AA with transferable charges, OPLS-AA with non-transferable CM1A charges, AMBER/GAFF, and CHARMM/CGenFF. Octanol parameters for OPLS-AA, GAFF and CHARMM were validated by comparing the density as a function of temperature, the chemical potential, and the hydration free energy to experimental values. The partition coefficients were calculated from the solvation free energy for the compounds in water and pure ("dry") octanol or "wet" octanol with 27 mol% water dissolved. Absolute solvation free energies were computed by thermodynamic integration (TI) and the multistate Bennett acceptance ratio with uncorrelated samples from data generated by an established protocol using 5-ns windowed alchemical free energy perturbation (FEP) calculations with the Gromacs molecular dynamics package. Equilibration of sets of FEP simulations was quantified by a new measure of convergence based on the analysis of forward and time-reversed trajectories. The accuracy of the [Formula: see text] predictions was assessed by descriptive statistical measures such as the root mean square error (RMSE) of the data set compared to the experimental values. Discarding the first 1 ns of each 5-ns window as an equilibration phase had a large effect on the GAFF data, where it improved the RMSE by up to 0.8 log units, while the effect for other data sets was smaller or marginally worsened the agreement. Overall, CGenFF gave the best prediction with RMSE 1.2 log units, although for only eight molecules because the current CGenFF workflow for Gromacs does not generate files for certain halogen-containing compounds. Over all eleven compounds, GAFF gave an RMSE of 1.5. The effect of using a mixed water/octanol solvent slightly decreased the accuracy for CGenFF and GAFF and slightly increased it for OPLS-AA. The GAFF and OPLS-AA results displayed a systematic error where molecules were too hydrophobic whereas CGenFF appeared to be more balanced, at least on this small data set.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0920654X and 15734951
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Computer-Aided Molecular Design, Journal of Computer-Aided Molecular Design, Springer Verlag, 2020, 34 (5), pp.543-560. ⟨10.1007/s10822-019-00267-z⟩, J Comput Aided Mol Des
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8af93df5201528ef1196530900f866ad
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10822-019-00267-z⟩