Abstract

We developed a random forest machine learning (ML) model for the prediction of 1H and 13C NMR chemical shifts of nucleic acids. Our ML model is trained entirely on reproducing computed chemical shifts obtained previously on 10 nucleic acids using a Molecules-in-Molecules (MIM) fragment-based density functional theory (DFT) protocol including microsolvation effects. Our ML model includes structural descriptors as well as electronic descriptors from an inexpensive low-level semiempirical calculation (GFN2-xTB) and trained on a relatively small number of DFT chemical shifts (2080 1H chemical shifts and 1780 13C chemical shifts on the 10 nucleic acids). The ML model is then used to make chemical shift predictions on 8 new nucleic acids ranging in size from 600 to 900 atoms and compared directly to experimental data. Though no experimental data was used in the training, the performance of our model is excellent (mean absolute deviation of 0.34 ppm for 1H chemical shifts and 2.52 ppm for 13C chemical shifts for the test set), despite having some nonstandard structures. A simple analysis suggests that both structural and electronic descriptors are critical for achieving reliable predictions. This is the first attempt to combine ML from fragment-based DFT calculations to predict experimental chemical shifts accurately, making the MIM-ML model a valuable tool for NMR predictions of nucleic acids.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call