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Hybrid Quantum-Classical Molecular Dynamics of Hydrogen Transfer Reactions in Enzymes Sharon Hammes-Schiffer Penn State University Enzymes • Catalyze chemical reactions: make them faster cofactor enzyme substrate chemical reaction Issues to be Explored • Fundamental nature of H nuclear quantum effects – Zero point energy – H tunneling – Nonadiabatic effects • Rates and kinetic isotope effects – Comparison to experiment – Prediction • Role of structure and motion of enzyme and solvent • Impact of enzyme mutations Impact of Enzyme Motion • Activation free energy barrier – equilibrium between transition state and reactant • Dynamical re-crossings of free energy barrier – nonequilibrium dynamical effect Hybrid Approach Billeter, Webb, Iordanov, Agarwal, SHS, JCP 114, 6925 (2001) Real-time mixed quantum/classical molecular dynamics simulations including nuclear quantum effects and motion of complete solvated enzyme • Elucidates relation between specific enzyme motions and enzyme activity • Distinguishes between activation free energy and dynamical barrier recrossing effects Two Levels of Quantum Mechanics • Electrons – Breaking and forming bonds – Empirical valence bond (EVB) potential Warshel and coworkers • Nuclei – Zero point motion and hydrogen tunneling – H nucleus represented by 3D vibrational wavefunction – Mixed quantum/classical molecular dynamics – MDQT surface hopping method Empirical Valence Bond Potential EVB State 1 EVB State 2 D D H A H A V12 V1 (R nuc ) H EVB (R nuc ) V V ( R ) 12 2 nuc 12 Diagonalize H EVB (R nuc ) Vg (R nuc ) • GROMOS forcefield • Morse potential for D-H and A-H bond • 2 parameters fit to reproduce experimental free energies of activation and reaction Treat H Nucleus QM • Mixed quantum/classical nuclei r: H nucleus, quantum R: all other nuclei, classical • Calculate 3D H vibrational wavefunctions on grid TH Vg (r, R ) n (r; R ) n ( R ) n (r; R) Fourier grid Hamiltonian multiconfigurational self-consistent-field (FGH-MCSCF) Webb and SHS, JCP 113, 5214 (2000) Partial multidimensional grid generation method Iordanov et al., CPL 338, 389 (2001) Calculation of Rates and KIEs kdyn kTST k BT h -G † / k BT e • kTST – Equilibrium TST rate – Calculated from activation free energy – Generate adiabatic quantum free energy profiles • 0 1 – Nonequilibrium transmission coefficient – Accounts for dynamical re-crossings of barrier – Reactive flux scheme including nonadiabatic effects Calculation of Free Energy Profile • Collective reaction coordinate (R) V11 (r, R) - V22 (r, R) o • Mapping potential to drive reaction over barrier Vmap (r, R; m ) (1 - m )V11 (r, R ) mV22 (r, R ) • Thermodynamic integration to connect free energy curves • Perturbation formula to include adiabatic H quantum effects e e - F0 ( n ;m ) -Vintmap ( R ;m ) e - Fmap ( n ;m ) Cr dre e - [ o ( R ) -Vintmap ( R ;m )] - Vmap ( r , R ;m ) m , n Calculation of Transmission Coefficient • Reactive flux approach for infrequent events – Initiate ensemble of trajectories at dividing surface – Propagate backward and forward in time w = 1/a for trajectories with a forward and a-1 backward crossings = 0 otherwise • MDQT surface hopping method to include vibrationally nonadiabatic effects (excited vibrational states) Tully, 1990; SHS and Tully, 1994 Mixed Quantum/Classical MD Nc H tot PI2 TH Vg (r, R ) I 1 2 M I • Classical molecular dynamics FIeff M I R I -R I V eff (R) • Calculate adiabatic H quantum states TH Vg (r, R ) n (r; R ) ( R ) n (r; R) n • Expand time-dependent wavefunction (r, R, t ) Cn (t ) n (r; R) 2 n C n (t ) : quantum probability for state n at time t • Solve time-dependent Schrödinger equation i Ck Ck k - i C R d j kj d kj k R j j Hynes,Warshel,Borgis,Ciccotti,Kapral,Laria,McCammon,van Gunsteren,Cukier MDQT Tully, 1990; SHS and Tully, 1994 • System remains in single adiabatic quantum state k except for instantaneous nonadiabatic transitions • Probabilistic surface hopping algorithm: for large number of trajectories, fraction in state n at time t is C n ( t ) 2 • Incorporates zero point energy and H tunneling • Valid in adiabatic, nonadiabatic, and intermediate regimes MDQT Reactive Flux • Reactive flux approach for infrequent events – Initiate ensemble of trajectories at dividing surface – Propagate backward and forward in time • Extension for MDQT [Hammes-Schiffer and Tully, 1995] – Propagate backward with fictitious surface hopping algorithm independent of quantum amplitudes – Re-trace trajectory in forward direction to determine weighting to reproduce results of MDQT Liver Alcohol Dehydrogenase LADH Alcohol NAD+ Aldehyde/Ketone NADH + H+ • Critical for key steps in metabolism • Relevant to medical complications of alcoholism • Experiments: Klinman (KIE, mutagenesis) • Other theory – electronic structure: Houk, Bruice, Gready – molecular dynamics: Bruice – VTST-QM/MM: Truhlar, Gao, Hillier, Cui, Karplus LADH Simulation System Crystal structure: Ramaswamy, Eklund, Plapp, 1994 • 75140 atoms in rectangular periodic box • Two protein chains, co-enzymes, benzyl alcohol substrates • 22682 solvent (water molecules) Active Site of LADH • Proton transfer occurs prior to hydride transfer – Experimental data – Electronic structure/classical forcefield calculations Agarwal, Webb, SHS, JACS 122, 4803 (2000) LADH Reaction Free Energy Profile for LADH • Two EVB parameters fit to experimental free energies Plapp and coworkers, Biochemistry 32, 11186 (1993) • Nuclear quantum effects decrease free energy barrier Hydrogen Vibrational Wavefunctions Ground state Reactant TS Product Excited state Isotope Effects of H Wavefunctions at TS Hydrogen Deuterium Tritium KIE from Activation Free Energy kH/kD kD/kT TST Calculations 5.0 ± 1.8 2.4 ± 0.8 1Bahnson and Klinman, 1995 Experiment1 3.78 ± 0.07 1.89 ± 0.01 The Reactive Center Equilibrium Averages of Properties Real-Time Dynamical Trajectories LADH Productive Trajectory LADH Unproductive Trajectory LADH Recrossing Trajectory Transmission Coefficient H = 0.95 D = 0.98 • Values nearly unity dynamical effects not dominant • Inverse KIE for Calculations: kH/kD = 4.8 ± 1.8 Experiment: kH/kD = 3.78 ± 0.07 Correlation Functions Normalized weighted correlation between geometrical property and barrier re-crossing () Property CD-CA distance Zn-O distance CD-O distance VAL-203 Cg1-CA distance VAL-203 Cg1-NH4 distance VAL-203 Cg1-CD distance C NAD+/NADH angle N NAD+/NADH angle Correlation 17.8% 0.5% 5.0% 5.6% 5.2% 0.2% - 1.7% 10.4% Standard deviation for random sample: 6.0% Dihydrofolate Reductase DHFR DHF NADPH + H+ THF NADP+ • Maintains levels of THF required for biosynthesis of purines, pyrimidines, and amino acids • Pharmacological applications • Experiments: Benkovic (kinetics, mutagenesis), Wright (NMR) • Previous theory – electronic structure: Houk – QM/MM: Gready and coworkers – molecular dynamics: Radkiewicz and Brooks DHFR Simulation System Crystal structure: 1rx2, Sawaya and Kraut, Biochemistry 1997 • 14063 atoms in octahedral periodic box • NADPH co-enzyme, DHF substrate • 4122 solvent (water molecules) DHFR Reaction Free Energy Profile for DHFR Agarwal, Billeter, Hammes-Schiffer, JPC 106, 3283 (2002) • Two EVB parameters fit to experimental free energies Fierke, Johnson and Benkovic, Biochemistry 1987 • kH/kD TST: 3.4 ± 0.8, experiment: 3.0 ± 0.4 Transmission Coefficient for DHFR H = 0.80 D = 0.85 • Values less than unity dynamical barrier recrossings significant • Physical basis − friction from environment − not due to nonadiabatic transitions DHFR Productive Trajectory Motion in DHFR Agarwal, Billeter, Rajagopalan, Benkovic, Hammes-Schiffer, PNAS 2002 • Conserved residues (genomic analysis across 36 species, E. coli to human) • Effects of mutations on hydride transfer rate: large effects far from active site, non-additive double mutants • NMR: dynamic regions Wright and coworkers • MD: correlated regions Radkiewicz and Brooks Hybrid Quantum-Classical Simulations • Systematic study of conserved residues • Calculated two quantities per distance − thermally averaged change from reactant to TS (ms timescale of H─ transfer) − correlation to degree of barrier recrossing (fs-ps timescale of dynamics near TS) DHF/NADPH Motion Motions Near DHF/NADPH Loop Motion Network of Coupled Promoting Motions • Located in active site and exterior of enzyme • Contribute to collective reaction coordinate • Occur on millisecond timescale of H- transfer reaction G121V Mutant Free Energy Profile Gly Val Simulations: G121V has higher free energy barrier than WT Experiment: G121V rate 163 times smaller than WT G121V Mutant Motions WT G121V Summary of Hybrid Approach • Generate free energy profiles and dynamical trajectories − Nuclear quantum effects included − Motion of complete solvated enzyme included • Wealth of information – Rates and KIEs – Fundamental nature of nuclear quantum effects – Relation between specific enzyme motions and activity (activation free energy and barrier re-crossings) – Impact of mutations – Network of coupled promoting motions Acknowledgements Pratul Agarwal Salomon Billeter Tzvetelin Iordanov James Watney Simon Webb DHFR: Ravi Rajagopalan, Stephen Benkovic Funding: NSF, NIH, Sloan, Dreyfus