Publication details

Toward Improved Description of DNA Backbone: Revisiting Epsilon and Zeta Torsion Force Field Parameters

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Authors

ZGARBOVA Marie LUQUE Javier F. ŠPONER Jiří CHEATHAM Thomas E III OTYEPKA Michal JUREČKA Petr

Year of publication 2013
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation
MU Faculty or unit

Central European Institute of Technology

Citation
Web http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/ct400154j
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/ct400154j
Field Physical chemistry and theoretical chemistry
Keywords MOLECULAR-DYNAMICS SIMULATIONS; PHOSPHORUS CHEMICAL-SHIFTS; SUGAR-PHOSPHATE BACKBONE; NUCLEIC-ACID STRUCTURES; BASIS-SET CONVERGENCE; B-II TRANSITIONS; CRYSTAL-STRUCTURES; A-TRACT; CONFORMATIONAL PROPERTIES; RELATIVE FLEXIBILITY
Description We present a refinement of the backbone torsion parameters epsilon and zeta of the Cornell et al. AMBER force field for DNA simulations. The new parameters, denoted as epsilon zeta(OL1), were derived from quantum-mechanical calculations with inclusion of conformation-dependent solvation effects according to the recently reported methodology (J. Chem. Theory Comput. 2012, 7 (9), 2886-2902). The performance of the refined parameters was analyzed by means of extended molecular dynamics (MD) simulations for several representative systems. The results showed that the epsilon zeta(OL1) refinement improves the backbone description of B-DNA double helices and the G-DNA stem. In B-DNA simulations, we observed an average increase of the helical twist and narrowing of the major groove, thus achieving better agreement with X-ray and solution NMR data. The balance between populations of BI and BII backbone substates was shifted toward the BII state, in better agreement with ensemble-refined solution experimental results. Furthermore, the refined parameters decreased the backbone RMS deviations in B-DNA MD simulations. In the antiparallel guanine quadruplex (G-DNA), the epsilon zeta(OL1) modification improved the description of noncanonical alpha/gamma backbone substates, which were shown to be coupled to the epsilon/zeta torsion potential. Thus, the refinement is suggested as a possible alternative to the current epsilon/zeta torsion potential, which may enable more accurate modeling of nucleic acids. However, long-term testing is recommended before its routine application in DNA simulations.
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