Journal of chemical theory and computation | 2019

Free Energy Calculations Based on Coupling Proximal Distribution Functions and Thermodynamic Cycles.

 
 

Abstract


Techniques to calculate the free energy changes of a system are very useful in the study of biophysical and biochemical properties. In practice, free energy changes can be described with thermodynamic cycles, and the free energy change of an individual process can be computed by sufficiently sampling the corresponding configurations. However, this is still time-consuming especially for large biomolecular systems. Previously, we have shown that by utilizing precomputed solute-solvent correlations, so-called proximal distribution functions (pDF), we are capable of reconstructing the solvent environment near solute atoms, thus estimating the solute-solvent interactions and solvation free energies of molecules. In this contribution, we apply the technique of pDF-reconstructions to calculate chemical potentials and use this information in thermodynamic cycles. This illustrates how free energy changes of nontrivial chemical processes in aqueous solution systems can be rapidly estimated.

Volume 15 4
Pages \n 2649-2658\n
DOI 10.1021/acs.jctc.8b01157
Language English
Journal Journal of chemical theory and computation

Full Text