Abstract

Electrostatic interactions have a determining role in the conformational and dynamic behavior of polyelectrolyte molecules. In this study, anionic polyelectrolyte molecules, poly(glutamic acid) (PGA) and poly(aspartic acid) (PASA), in a water solution with the most commonly used K+ or Na+ counterions, were investigated using atomistic molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. We performed a comparison of seven popular force fields, namely AMBER99SB-ILDN, AMBER14SB, AMBER-FB15, CHARMM22*, CHARMM27, CHARMM36m and OPLS-AA/L, both with their native parameters and using two common corrections for overbinding of ions, the non-bonded fix (NBFIX), and electronic continuum corrections (ECC). These corrections were originally introduced to correct for the often-reported problem concerning the overbinding of ions to the charged groups of polyelectrolytes. In this work, a comparison of the simulation results with existing experimental data revealed several differences between the investigated force fields. The data from these simulations and comparisons with previous experimental data were then used to determine the limitations and strengths of these force fields in the context of the structural and dynamic properties of anionic polyamino acids. Physical properties, such as molecular sizes, local structure, and dynamics, were studied using two types of common counterions, namely potassium and sodium. The results show that, in some cases, both the macroion size and dynamics depend strongly on the models (parameters) for the counterions due to strong overbinding of the ions and charged side chain groups. The local structures and dynamics are more sensitive to dihedral angle parameterization, resulting in a preference for defined monomer conformations and the type of correction used. We also provide recommendations based on the results.

Highlights

  • Overbinding of charged moieties in classical molecular dynamics (MD) simulations is a well-known problem that has its roots in force field parameterization [1,2,3,4,5]

  • The problem has been recognized for a long time but it persists and is important as simulations of soft matter and biological systems typically involve the presence of counterions, salt or both, and overbinding can have an influence on both their structural and dynamic properties

  • Visual molecular dynamics (VMD) software [54] was used for visual trajectory analyses

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Summary

Introduction

This article is an open access articleOverbinding of charged moieties in classical MD simulations is a well-known problem that has its roots in force field parameterization [1,2,3,4,5]. The problem has been recognized for a long time but it persists and is important as simulations of soft matter and biological systems typically involve the presence of counterions, salt or both, and overbinding can have an influence on both their structural and dynamic properties. Other solutions involve the addition of corrections to electrostatic interactions into non-polarizable force fields [3,4,5,12]. Those simulations are computationally cheaper and currently cover a large number of biomolecules. There are two commonly used corrections, namely the ad hoc the non-bonded fix (NBFIX) [3] and the mean-field electronic continuum corrections (ECC) [13]

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