An accurate but efficient description of noncovalent interactions is a key to predictive modeling of biological and materials systems. The effective fragment potential (EFP) is an ab initio-based force field that provides a physically meaningful decomposition of noncovalent interactions of a molecular system into Coulomb, polarization, dispersion, and exchange-repulsion components. An EFP simulation protocol consists of two steps, preparing parameters for molecular fragments by a series of ab initio calculations on each individual fragment, and calculation of interaction energy and properties of a total molecular system based on the prepared parameters. As the fragment parameters (distributed multipoles, polarizabilities, localized wave function, etc.) depend on a fragment geometry, straightforward application of the EFP method requires recomputing parameters of each fragment if its geometry changes, for example, during thermal fluctuations of a molecular system. Thus, recomputing fragment parameters can easily become both computational and human bottlenecks and lead to a loss of efficiency of a simulation protocol. An alternative approach, in which fragment parameters are adjusted to different fragment geometries, referred to as "flexible EFP", is explored here. The parameter adjustment is based on translations and rotations of local coordinate frames associated with fragment atoms. The protocol is validated on extensive benchmark of amino acid dimers extracted from molecular dynamics snapshots of a cryptochrome protein. A parameter database for standard amino acids is developed to automate flexible EFP simulations in proteins. To demonstrate applicability of flexible EFP in large-scale protein simulations, binding energies and vertical electron ionization and electron attachment energies of a lumiflavin chromophore of the cryptochrome protein are computed. The results obtained with flexible EFP are in a close agreement with the standard EFP procedure but provide a significant reduction in computational cost.
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