High quality NMR structures: a new force field with implicit water and membrane solvation for Xplor-NIH.
J Biomol NMR. 2016 Dec 29;:
Authors: Tian Y, Schwieters CD, Opella SJ, Marassi FM
Abstract
Structure determination of proteins by NMR is unique in its ability to measure restraints, very accurately, in environments and under conditions that closely mimic those encountered in vivo. For example, advances in solid-state NMR methods enable structure determination of membrane proteins in detergent-free lipid bilayers, and of large soluble proteins prepared by sedimentation, while parallel advances in solution NMR methods and optimization of detergent-free lipid nanodiscs are rapidly pushing the envelope of the size limit for both soluble and membrane proteins. These experimental advantages, however, are partially squandered during structure calculation, because the commonly used force fields are purely repulsive and neglect solvation, Van der Waals forces and electrostatic energy. Here we describe a new force field, and updated energy functions, for protein structure calculations with EEFx implicit solvation, electrostatics, and Van der Waals Lennard-Jones forces, in the widely used program Xplor-NIH. The new force field is based primarily on CHARMM22, facilitating calculations with a wider range of biomolecules. The new EEFx energy function has been rewritten to enable OpenMP parallelism, and optimized to enhance computation efficiency. It implements solvation, electrostatics, and Van der Waals energy terms together, thus ensuring more consistent and efficient computation of the complete nonbonded energy lists. Updates in the related python module allow detailed analysis of the interaction energies and associated parameters. The new force field and energy function work with both soluble proteins and membrane proteins, including those with cofactors or engineered tags, and are very effective in situations where there are sparse experimental restraints. Results obtained for NMR-restrained calculations with a set of five soluble proteins and five membrane proteins show that structures calculated with EEFx have significant improvements in accuracy, precision, and conformation, and that structure refinement can be obtained by short relaxation with EEFx to obtain improvements in these key metrics. These developments broaden the range of biomolecular structures that can be calculated with high fidelity from NMR restraints.
PMID: 28035651 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
High quality NMR structures: a new force field with implicit water and membrane solvation for Xplor-NIH
High quality NMR structures: a new force field with implicit water and membrane solvation for Xplor-NIH
Abstract
Structure determination of proteins by NMR is unique in its ability to measure restraints, very accurately, in environments and under conditions that closely mimic those encountered in vivo. For example, advances in solid-state NMR methods enable structure determination of membrane proteins in detergent-free lipid bilayers, and of large soluble proteins prepared by sedimentation, while parallel advances in solution NMR methods and...
nmrlearner
Journal club
0
12-29-2016 09:23 PM
NMR Restrained Protein Structure Calculations in Implicit Water/Membrane*Environments
NMR Restrained Protein Structure Calculations in Implicit Water/Membrane*Environments
Publication date: 16 February 2016
Source:Biophysical Journal, Volume 110, Issue 3, Supplement 1</br>
Author(s): Ye Tian, Charles Schwieters, Stanley Opella, Francesca Marassi</br>
</br></br>
</br></br>
More...
nmrlearner
Journal club
0
02-17-2016 07:50 PM
[NMR paper] Backbone structure of Yersinia pestis Ail determined in micelles by NMR-restrained simulated annealing with implicit membrane solvation.
Backbone structure of Yersinia pestis Ail determined in micelles by NMR-restrained simulated annealing with implicit membrane solvation.
Backbone structure of Yersinia pestis Ail determined in micelles by NMR-restrained simulated annealing with implicit membrane solvation.
J Biomol NMR. 2015 Jul 5;
Authors: Marassi FM, Ding Y, Schwieters CD, Tian Y, Yao Y
Abstract
The outer membrane protein Ail (attachment invasion locus) is a virulence factor of Yersinia pestis that mediates cell invasion, cell attachment and complement...
nmrlearner
Journal club
0
07-06-2015 04:35 PM
Backbone structure of Yersinia pestis Ail determined in micelles by NMR-restrained simulated annealing with implicit membrane solvation
Backbone structure of Yersinia pestis Ail determined in micelles by NMR-restrained simulated annealing with implicit membrane solvation
Abstract
The outer membrane protein Ail (attachment invasion locus) is a virulence factor of Yersinia pestis that mediates cell invasion, cell attachment and complement resistance. Here we describe its three-dimensional backbone structure determined in decyl-phosphocholine (DePC) micelles by NMR spectroscopy. The NMR structure was calculated using the membrane function of the implicit solvation potential, eefxPot,...
nmrlearner
Journal club
0
07-05-2015 02:07 AM
Chemical shift prediction for protein structure calculation and quality assessment using an optimally parameterized force field
Chemical shift prediction for protein structure calculation and quality assessment using an optimally parameterized force field
January 2012
Publication year: 2012
Source:Progress in Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Volume 60</br>
</br>
The exquisite sensitivity of chemical shifts as reporters of structural information, and the ability to measure them routinely and accurately, gives great import to formulations that elucidate the structure-chemical-shift relationship. Here we present a new and highly accurate, precise, and robust formulation for the prediction...
nmrlearner
Journal club
0
12-15-2012 09:51 AM
Chemical shift prediction for protein structure calculation and quality assessment using an optimally parameterized force field
Chemical shift prediction for protein structure calculation and quality assessment using an optimally parameterized force field
January 2012
Publication year: 2012
Source:Progress in Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Volume 60</br>
</br>
The exquisite sensitivity of chemical shifts as reporters of structural information, and the ability to measure them routinely and accurately, gives great import to formulations that elucidate the structure-chemical-shift relationship. Here we present a new and highly accurate, precise, and robust formulation for the prediction...
nmrlearner
Journal club
0
12-01-2012 06:10 PM
Chemical shift prediction for protein structure calculation and quality assessment using an optimally parameterized force field
Chemical shift prediction for protein structure calculation and quality assessment using an optimally parameterized force field
Publication year: 2012
Source:Progress in Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Volume 60</br>
Jakob T. Nielsen, Hamid R. Eghbalnia, Niels Chr. Nielsen</br>
The exquisite sensitivity of chemical shifts as reporters of structural information, and the ability to measure them routinely and accurately, gives great import to formulations that elucidate the structure-chemical-shift relationship. Here we present a new and highly accurate, precise,...
nmrlearner
Journal club
0
03-09-2012 09:16 AM
Chemical shift prediction for protein structure calculation and quality assessment using an optimally parameterized force field
Chemical shift prediction for protein structure calculation and quality assessment using an optimally parameterized force field
Publication year: 2011
Source: Progress in Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, In Press, Accepted Manuscript, Available online 23 May 2011</br>
Jakob T., Nielsen , Hamid R., Eghbalnia , Niels Chr., Nielsen</br>
The exquisite sensitivity of chemical shifts as reporters of structural information, and the ability to measure them routinely and accurately, gives great import to formulations that elucidate the structure-chemical-shift relationship. Here we...