scholarly journals Open Force Field Consortium: Escaping atom types using direct chemical perception with SMIRNOFF v0.1

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
David L. Mobley ◽  
Caitlin C. Bannan ◽  
Andrea Rizzi ◽  
Christopher I. Bayly ◽  
John D. Chodera ◽  
...  

AbstractHere, we focus on testing and improving force fields for molecular modeling, which see widespread use in diverse areas of computational chemistry and biomolecular simulation. A key issue affecting the accuracy and transferrability of these force fields is the use of atom typing. Traditional approaches to defining molecular mechanics force fields must encode, within a discrete set of atom types, all information which will ever be needed about the chemical environment; parameters are then assigned by looking up combinations of these atom types in tables. This atom typing approach leads to a wide variety of problems such as inextensible atom-typing machinery, enormous difficulty in expanding parameters encoded by atom types, and unnecessarily proliferation of encoded parameters. Here, we describe a new approach to assigning parameters for molecular mechanics force fields based on the industry standard SMARTS chemical perception language (with extensions to identify specific atoms available in SMIRKS). In this approach, each force field term (bonds, angles, and torsions, and nonbonded interactions) features separate definitions assigned in a hierarchical manner without using atom types. We accomplish this using direct chemical perception, where parameters are assigned directly based on substructure queries operating on the molecule(s) being parameterized, thereby avoiding the intermediate step of assigning atom types — a step which can be considered indirect chemical perception. Direct chemical perception allows for substantial simplification of force fields, as well as additional generality in the substructure queries. This approach is applicable to a wide variety of (bio)molecular systems, and can greatly reduce the number of parameters needed to create a complete force field. Further flexibility can also be gained by allowing force field terms to be interpolated based on the assignment of fractional bond orders via the same procedure used to assign partial charges. As an example of the utility of this approach, we provide a minimalist small molecule force field derived from Merck’s parm@Frosst (an Amber parm99 descendant), in which a parameter definition file only ≈ 300 lines long can parameterize a large and diverse spectrum of pharmaceutically relevant small molecule chemical space. We benchmark this minimalist force field on the FreeSolv small molecule hydration free energy set and calculations of densities and dielectric constants from the ThermoML Archive, demonstrating that it achieves comparable accuracy to the Generalized Amber Force Field (GAFF) that consists of many thousands of parameters.

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohammad Ghahremanpour ◽  
Paul J. van Maaren ◽  
Carl Caleman ◽  
Geoffrey Hutchison ◽  
David van der Spoel

Submitted manuscript that describes derivation of atomic polarization and exponents for Gaussian or Slater distribution functions to describe polarizable atoms in force fields. Parameters are provided based on the General Amber Force Field, for H, C, N, O, F, P, S, Cl, Br, I.<br>


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohammad Ghahremanpour ◽  
Paul J. van Maaren ◽  
Carl Caleman ◽  
Geoffrey Hutchison ◽  
David van der Spoel

Submitted manuscript that describes derivation of atomic polarization and exponents for Gaussian or Slater distribution functions to describe polarizable atoms in force fields. Parameters are provided based on the General Amber Force Field, for H, C, N, O, F, P, S, Cl, Br, I.<br>


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maximiliano Riquelme ◽  
Alejandro Lara ◽  
David L. Mobley ◽  
Toon Vestraelen ◽  
Adelio R Matamala ◽  
...  

<div>Computer simulations of bio-molecular systems often use force fields, which are combinations of simple empirical atom-based functions to describe the molecular interactions. Even though polarizable force fields give a more detailed description of intermolecular interactions, nonpolarizable force fields, developed several decades ago, are often still preferred because of their reduced computation cost. Electrostatic interactions play a major role in bio-molecular systems and are therein described by atomic point charges.</div><div>In this work, we address the performance of different atomic charges to reproduce experimental hydration free energies in the FreeSolv database in combination with the GAFF force field. Atomic charges were calculated by two atoms-in-molecules approaches, Hirshfeld-I and Minimal Basis Iterative Stockholder (MBIS). To account for polarization effects, the charges were derived from the solute's electron density computed with an implicit solvent model and the energy required to polarize the solute was added to the free energy cycle. The calculated hydration free energies were analyzed with an error model, revealing systematic errors associated with specific functional groups or chemical elements. The best agreement with the experimental data is observed for the MBIS atomic charge method, including the solvent polarization, with a root mean square error of 2.0 kcal mol<sup>-1</sup> for the 613 organic molecules studied. The largest deviation was observed for phosphor-containing molecules and the molecules with amide, ester and amine functional groups.</div>


2016 ◽  
Vol 56 (4) ◽  
pp. 811-818 ◽  
Author(s):  
Suqing Zheng ◽  
Qing Tang ◽  
Jian He ◽  
Shiyu Du ◽  
Shaofang Xu ◽  
...  

1997 ◽  
Vol 52 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 89-96 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thereza Amélia Soares ◽  
Roberto Dias Lins ◽  
Ricardo Longo ◽  
Richard Garratt ◽  
Ricardo Ferreira

Abstract By computer simulations -molecular mechanics and molecular dynamics with the amber force field (Weiner et al., (1986), J. Comp. Chem. 7, 2 30-252) -we have determined the stabilities of oligoribotide strands built with ᴅ -and ʟ-riboses, and of peptide chains with ᴅ -and ʟ-amino acid residues. In particular, complementary double-chains of oligoribotides were studied, since they are an important feature of the growing mechanism of modern nucleic acids. Peptide chains on the other hand, grow without need of a template. We found that mixed oligoribotides are less stable than homochiral ones, and that this chiral effect is less noticeable in peptide chains. The results support the interpretation that ʟ-riboses act as terminators to the template-assisted growth of oligo-r-Gᴅ (enantiomeric cross-inhibition; Joyce et al., (1987), Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 84, 4398-4402). Based on this effect, a chemical pathway is proposed which could, under assumed prebiotic conditions, bypass the hindrance of homochiral growth.


2015 ◽  
Vol 17 (38) ◽  
pp. 25123-25132 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hainam Do ◽  
Alessandro Troisi

A rapid method to parameterize the intramolecular component of classical force fields is proposed and applied to a molecular semiconductor, oligomers of conjugated polymers and a biological chromophore.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michal Janeček ◽  
Petra Kührová ◽  
Vojtěch Mlýnský ◽  
Michal Otyepka ◽  
Jiří Šponer ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTRepresentation of electrostatic interactions by a Coulombic pair-wise potential between atom-centered partial charges is a fundamental and crucial part of empirical force fields used in classical molecular dynamics simulations. The broad success of the AMBER force field family originates mainly from the restrained electrostatic potential (RESP) charge model, which derives partial charges to reproduce the electrostatic field around the molecules. However, description of the electrostatic potential around molecules by standard RESP may be biased for some types of molecules. In this study, we modified the RESP charge derivation model to improve its description of the electrostatic potential around molecules, and thus electrostatic interactions in the force field. In particular, we re-optimized the atomic radii for definition of the grid points around the molecule, redesigned the restraining scheme and included extra point charges. The RESP fitting was significantly improved for aromatic heterocyclic molecules. Thus, the suggested W-RESP(-EP) charge derivation model showed clear potential for improving the performance of the nucleic acid force fields, for which poor description of nonbonded interactions, such as underestimated base pairing, makes it difficult to describe the folding free energy landscape of small oligonucleotides.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Camila Zanette ◽  
Caitlin C. Bannan ◽  
Christopher I. Bayly ◽  
Josh Fass ◽  
Michael Gilson ◽  
...  

<div>Molecular mechanics force fields define how the energy and forces of a molecular system are computed from its atomic positions, and enable the study of such systems through computational methods like molecular dynamics and Monte Carlo simulations. Despite progress toward automated force field parameterization, considerable human expertise is required to develop or extend force fields. </div><div>In particular, human input has long been required to define <i>atom types</i>, which encode chemically unique environments that determine which parameters must be assigned. However, relying on humans to establish atom types is suboptimal: the resulting atom types are often unjustified from a statistical perspective, leading to over- or under-fitting; they are difficult to extend in a systematic and consistent manner when new chemistries must be modeled or new data becomes available; and human effort is not scalable when force fields must be generated for new (bio)polymers or materials. We aim to replace human specification of atom types with an automated approach, based on solid statistics and driven by experimental and/or quantum chemical reference data. Here, we describe a novel technology for this purpose, termed <i>SMARTY</i>, which generalizes atom typing by using direct chemical perception with SMARTS strings, and adopting a hierarchical approach to type assignment. The SMARTY technology enables creation of a move set in atom-typing space that can be used in a Monte Carlo optimization approach to atom typing. We demonstrate the power of this approach with a fully automated procedure that is able to re-discover human-defined atom types in the traditional small molecule force field parm99/parm@Frosst. Furthermore, we show how an extension of this approach that makes use of SMIRKS strings to match multiple atoms, which we term <i>SMIRKY</i>, allows us to take full advantage of the advances in direct chemical perception for valence types (bonds, angles, and torsions) afforded by the recently-proposed SMIRNOFF direct chemical perception force field typing language. We assess these approaches using several molecular datasets, including one which covers a diverse molecular subset from DrugBank. </div>


Author(s):  
David Slochower ◽  
Niel Henriksen ◽  
Lee-Ping Wang ◽  
John Chodera ◽  
David Mobley ◽  
...  

<div><div><div><p>Designing ligands that bind their target biomolecules with high affinity and specificity is a key step in small- molecule drug discovery, but accurately predicting protein-ligand binding free energies remains challenging. Key sources of errors in the calculations include inadequate sampling of conformational space, ambiguous protonation states, and errors in force fields. Noncovalent complexes between a host molecule with a binding cavity and a drug-like guest molecules have emerged as powerful model systems. As model systems, host-guest complexes reduce many of the errors in more complex protein-ligand binding systems, as their small size greatly facilitates conformational sampling, and one can choose systems that avoid ambiguities in protonation states. These features, combined with their ease of experimental characterization, make host-guest systems ideal model systems to test and ultimately optimize force fields in the context of binding thermodynamics calculations.</p><p><br></p><p>The Open Force Field Initiative aims to create a modern, open software infrastructure for automatically generating and assessing force fields using data sets. The first force field to arise out of this effort, named SMIRNOFF99Frosst, has approximately one tenth the number of parameters, in version 1.0.5, compared to typical general small molecule force fields, such as GAFF. Here, we evaluate the accuracy of this initial force field, using free energy calculations of 43 α and β-cyclodextrin host-guest pairs for which experimental thermodynamic data are available, and compare with matched calculations using two versions of GAFF. For all three force fields, we used TIP3P water and AM1-BCC charges. The calculations are performed using the attach-pull-release (APR) method as implemented in the open source package, pAPRika. For binding free energies, the root mean square error of the SMIRNOFF99Frosst calculations relative to experiment is 0.9 [0.7, 1.1] kcal/mol, while the corresponding results for GAFF 1.7 and GAFF 2.1 are 0.9 [0.7, 1.1] kcal/mol and 1.7 [1.5, 1.9] kcal/mol, respectively, with 95% confidence ranges in brackets. These results suggest that SMIRNOFF99Frosst performs competitively with existing small molecule force fields and is a parsimonious starting point for optimization.</p></div></div></div>


Author(s):  
Yudong Qiu ◽  
Daniel Smith ◽  
Simon Boothroyd ◽  
Hyesu Jang ◽  
Jeffrey Wagner ◽  
...  

We describe the structure and optimization of the Open Force Field 1.0.0 small molecule force field, code-named Parsley. Parsley uses the SMIRKS-native Open Force Field (SMIRNOFF) parameter assignment formalism in which parameter types are assigned directly by chemical perception, in contrast to traditional atom type-based approaches. This method provides a natural means to incorporate increasingly diverse chemistry without needlessly increasing force field complexity. In this work, we present essentially a full optimization of the valence parameters in the force field. The optimization was carried out with the ForceBalance tool and was informed by reference quantum chemical data that include torsion potential energy profiles, optimized gas-phase structures, and vibrational frequencies. These data were computed and are maintained with QCArchive, an open-source and freely available distributed computing and database software ecosystem. Tests of the resulting force field against compounds and data types outside the training set show improvements in optimized geometries and conformational energetics and demonstrate that Parsley's accuracy for liquid properties is similar to that of other general force fields. <br>


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