2022 Annual Meeting
(157c) Using Molecular Dynamics Simulations to Model Entropic Changes upon Peptide Binding
Authors
Molecular Dynamics (MD) is a computational method to simulate macromolecular behavior over time. In this study, we focused on small peptides of approximately 10 amino acids in two distinct states: unbound alone in solution as well as bound to a small protein domain in complex. Initial conformations of the peptides were extracted from the RSCB Protein Data Bank (PDB). Unnecessary molecules surrounding the system were removed using Chimera before being prepared using the MD software Visual Molecular Dynamics (VMD) and its QwikMD plugin. 2.5 ns MD simulations of the bound and unbound peptides were performed with explicit solvent molecules, and 100 conformational frames were generated over the course of the simulations. These frames were then clustered to identify the number of structural conformations the peptide experiences in its bound and unbound states. By clustering the repeated conformations being simulated, microstates can be quantified and applied using Boltzmannâs equation, allowing for the calculation of ÎS.
This presentation will discuss our findings from an initial set of 10 diverse peptides, as well as how lessons learned from those peptides are informing a larger study with the overall goal of reliable prediction of ÎS changes from peptide binding.