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Article Dans Une Revue Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation Année : 2016

Adaptive Multilevel Splitting Method for Molecular Dynamics Calculation of Benzamidine-Trypsin Dissociation Time

Résumé

Adaptive multilevel splitting (AMS) is a rare event sampling method that requires minimal parameter tuning and allows unbiased sampling of transition pathways of a given rare event. Previous simulation studies have verified the efficiency and accuracy of AMS in the calculation of transition times for simple systems in both Monte Carlo and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. Now, AMS is applied for the first time to an MD simulation of protein–ligand dissociation, representing a leap in complexity from the previous test cases. Of interest is the dissociation rate, which is typically too low to be accessible to conventional MD. The present study joins other recent efforts to develop advanced sampling techniques in MD to calculate dissociation rates, which are gaining importance in the pharmaceutical field as indicators of drug efficacy. The system investigated here, benzamidine bound to trypsin, is an example common to many of these efforts. The AMS estimate of the dissociation rate was found to be (2.6 ± 2.4) × 102 s–1, which compares well with the experimental value.

Dates et versions

hal-01389074 , version 1 (27-10-2016)

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Citer

Ivan Teo, Christopher G. Mayne, Klaus Schulten, Tony Lelièvre. Adaptive Multilevel Splitting Method for Molecular Dynamics Calculation of Benzamidine-Trypsin Dissociation Time. Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation, 2016, 12 (6), pp.2983 - 2989. ⟨10.1021/acs.jctc.6b00277⟩. ⟨hal-01389074⟩
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