Comparison of different approaches to derive classical bonded force-field parameters for a transition metal cofactor: a case study for non-heme iron site of ectoine synthase

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Abstract

Computational investigations into the structure and function of metalloenzymes with transition metal cofactors require proper preparation of the model, which requires obtaining reliable force field parameters for the cofactor. Here, we present a test case where several methods were used to derive amber force field parameters for a bonded model of the Fe(II) cofactor of ectoine synthase. Moreover, the spin of the ground state of the cofactor was probed by DFT and post-HF methods, which consistently indicated the quintet state is lowest in energy and well separated from triplet and singlet. The performance of the obtained force field parameter sets, derived for the quintet spin state, was scrutinized and compared taking into account metrics focused on geometric features of the models as well as their energetics. The main conclusion of this study is that Hessian-based methods yield parameters which represent the geometry around the metal ion, but poorly reproduce energy variance with geometrical changes. On the other hand, the energy-based method yields parameters accurately reproducing energy-structure relationships, but with bad performance in geometry optimization. Preliminary tests show that admixing geometrical criteria to energy-based methods may allow to derive parameters with acceptable performance for both energy and geometry.

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Andrys, J., Heider, J., & Borowski, T. (2021). Comparison of different approaches to derive classical bonded force-field parameters for a transition metal cofactor: a case study for non-heme iron site of ectoine synthase. Theoretical Chemistry Accounts, 140(8). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00214-021-02796-z

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