1: J Phys Chem B. 2007 Jan 11;111(1):227-41.Click here to read Click here to read Links

Liquid-structure forces and electrostatic modulation of biomolecular interactions in solution.

Center for Molecular Modeling, DCB/CIT, National Institutes of Health, U.S. DHHS, Bethesda, Maryland 20892, USA.

Molecular interactions in solution are controlled by the bulk medium and by the forces originating in the structured region of the solvent close to the solutes. In this paper, a model of electrostatic and liquid-structure forces for dynamics simulations of biomolecules is presented. The model introduces information on the microscopic nature of the liquid in the vicinity of polar and charged groups and the associated non-pairwise character of the forces, thus improving upon conventional continuum representations. The solvent is treated as a polar and polarizable medium, with dielectric properties described by an inhomogeneous version of the Onsager theory. This treatment leads to an effective position-dependent dielectric permittivity that incorporates saturation effects of the electric field and the spatial variation of the liquid density. The non-pairwise additivity of the liquid-structure forces is represented by centers of force located at specific points in the liquid phase. These out-of-the-solute centers are positioned at the peaks of liquid density and exert local, external forces on the atoms of the solute. The density is calculated from a barometric law, using a Lennard-Jones-type solute-liquid effective interaction potential. The conceptual aspects of the model and its exact numerical solutions are discussed for single alkali and halide ions and for ion-pair interactions. The practical aspects of the model and the simplifications introduced for efficient computation of forces in molecular solutes are discussed in the context of polar and charged amino acid dimers. The model reproduces the contact and solvent-separated minima and the desolvation barriers of intermolecular potentials of mean force of amino acid dimers, as observed in atomistic dynamics simulations. Possible refinements based on an improved treatment of molecular correlations are discussed.

PMID: 17201447 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

PMCID: PMC2467438