Significantly Improved Protein Folding Thermodynamics Using a Dispersion-Corrected Water Model and a New Residue-Specific Force Field.
Hao-Nan WuFan JiangYun-Dong WuPublished in: The journal of physical chemistry letters (2017)
An accurate potential energy model is crucial for biomolecular simulations. Despite many recent improvements of classical protein force fields, there are remaining key issues: much weaker temperature dependence of folding/unfolding equilibrium and overly collapsed unfolded or disordered states. For the latter problem, a new water model (TIP4P-D) has been proposed to correct the significantly underestimated water dispersion interactions. Here, using TIP4P-D, we reveal problems in current force fields through failures in folding model systems (a polyalanine peptide, Trp-cage, and the GB1 hairpin). By using residue-specific parameters to achieve better match between amino acid sequences and native structures and adding a small H-bond correction to partially compensate the missing many-body effects in α-helix formation, the new RSFF2+ force field with the TIP4P-D water model can excellently reproduce experimental melting curves of both α-helical and β-hairpin systems. The RSFF2+/TIP4P-D method also gives less collapsed unfolded structures and describes well folded proteins simultaneously.