Quantum mechanical calculation of the effects of stiff and rigid constraints in the conformational equilibrium of the alanine dipeptide
✍ Scribed by Pablo Echenique; Iván Calvo; J. L. Alonso
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2006
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 343 KB
- Volume
- 27
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0192-8651
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
If constraints are imposed on a macromolecule, two inequivalent classical models may be used: the stiff and the rigid one. This work studies the effects of such constraints on the conformational equilibrium distribution (CED) of the model dipeptide HCO‐L‐Ala‐NH~2~without any simplifying assumption. We use ab initio quantum mechanics calculations including electron correlation at the MP2 level to describe the system, and we measure the conformational dependence of all the correcting terms to the naive CED based in the potential energy surface that appear when the constraints are considered. These terms are related to mass‐metric tensors determinants and also occur in the Fixman's compensating potential. We show that some of the corrections are non‐negligible if one is interested in the whole Ramachandran space. On the other hand, if only the energetically lower region, containing the principal secondary structure elements, is assumed to be relevant, then, all correcting terms may be neglected up to peptides of considerable length. This is the first time, as far as we know, that the analysis of the conformational dependence of these correcting terms is performed in a relevant biomolecule with a realistic potential energy function. © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Comput Chem, 2006
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract The conformational behavior of the title compounds has been investigated by Hartree–Fock, MP2, and DFT computations on the most significant structures related to variations of the backbone dihedral angles, cis/trans isomerism around the peptide bond, and diastereoisomeric puckering of t
## Abstract We present multiple dynamic transition pathways on the two‐dimensional dihedral plane between conformational states of the alanine dipeptide. The method used in this study is dynamic importance sampling (DIMS). To perform DIMS, unbiased molecular dynamic simulations are used to generate
Molecular orbital calculations of the extended Hiickel type have been used to study the conformations of glycyl and alanyl residues in ground and excited states. The ground-state surfaces show features similar to those obtained with the standard calculational methods in which the total energy is par
## Abstract An integrated NMR‐quantum mechanical (QM) approach, relying on the comparison between calculated and experimental __J__‐values, was applied to the analysis of the relative configuration of four amino acid units (known as AGDHE, D‐__a__Thr1, D‐__a__Thr2 and β‐OMeTyr) contained in callipe