Refinement of protein crystal structures using energy restraints derived from linear-scaling quantum mechanics
March 01, 2005 Filed In:Xray
Abstract: A novel method is proposed
in which combined energy restraints derived from
linear-scaling semiempirical quantum mechanical (QM)
calculations and X-ray diffraction data are combined
to refine crystal structures of proteins. Its
performance has been tested on a small protein
molecule, bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI).
The refinement involves minimization of the sum of a
geometric energy function and an X-ray target
function based on either the least-square residual or
the maximum-likelihood formalism. For comparison,
similar refinement runs have also been performed
using energy restraints derived from the force field
available in the Crystallography & NMR System
(CNS) program. The QM refinements were carried out
with weights that were varied by several orders of
magnitude and the optimal weights were identified by
observing the trend in the final free R values, QM
heats of formation and coordinate root-mean-square
deviations (r.m.s.d.s) from the crystal structure. It
is found that the QM weights are typically smaller
but generally on the same scale as the
molecular-mechanics (MM) weights for the respective
X-ray target functions. The crystallographic R, free
R, real-space R values and correlation coefficients
based on the structures refined with the energy
restraints derived from our QM calculations and Engh
and Huber parameters are comparable, suggesting that
the QM restraints are capable of maintaining
reasonable stereochemistry to a similar degree as the
force-field parameters. A detailed inspection of the
structures refined with the QM and MM energy
restraints reveals that one of the common differences
between them and the crystal structure is that the
strained bond angles in the crystal structure are
corrected after energetically restrained refinements.
Systematic differences in certain bond lengths
between the QM-refined structures and the statistical
averages of experimental structures have also been
observed and discussed.
Authors: Ning Yu, Hemant P. Yennawar, and Kenneth M. Merz, Jr.
Reference: Acta Cryst. D. 2005, 61(3), 322-332. (see link for full paper).
Authors: Ning Yu, Hemant P. Yennawar, and Kenneth M. Merz, Jr.
Reference: Acta Cryst. D. 2005, 61(3), 322-332. (see link for full paper).