Amber free energy tools: Interoperable software for free energy simulations using generalized quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical and machine learning potentials

We report the development and testing of new integrated cyberinfrastructure for performing free energy simulations with generalized hybrid quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical (QM/MM) and machine learning potentials (MLPs) in Amber. The Sander molecular dynamics program has been extended to lever...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of chemical physics 2024-06, Vol.160 (22)
Hauptverfasser: Tao, Yujun, Giese, Timothy J., Ekesan, Şölen, Zeng, Jinzhe, Aradi, Bálint, Hourahine, Ben, Aktulga, Hasan Metin, Götz, Andreas W., Merz, Kenneth M., York, Darrin M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We report the development and testing of new integrated cyberinfrastructure for performing free energy simulations with generalized hybrid quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical (QM/MM) and machine learning potentials (MLPs) in Amber. The Sander molecular dynamics program has been extended to leverage fast, density-functional tight-binding models implemented in the DFTB+ and xTB packages, and an interface to the DeePMD-kit software enables the use of MLPs. The software is integrated through application program interfaces that circumvent the need to perform “system calls” and enable the incorporation of long-range Ewald electrostatics into the external software’s self-consistent field procedure. The infrastructure provides access to QM/MM models that may serve as the foundation for QM/MM–ΔMLP potentials, which supplement the semiempirical QM/MM model with a MLP correction trained to reproduce ab initio QM/MM energies and forces. Efficient optimization of minimum free energy pathways is enabled through a new surface-accelerated finite-temperature string method implemented in the FE-ToolKit package. Furthermore, we interfaced Sander with the i-PI software by implementing the socket communication protocol used in the i-PI client–server model. The new interface with i-PI allows for the treatment of nuclear quantum effects with semiempirical QM/MM–ΔMLP models. The modular interoperable software is demonstrated on proton transfer reactions in guanine-thymine mispairs in a B-form deoxyribonucleic acid helix. The current work represents a considerable advance in the development of modular software for performing free energy simulations of chemical reactions that are important in a wide range of applications.
ISSN:0021-9606
1089-7690
DOI:10.1063/5.0211276