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GmXtal: Cooking Crystals with GROMACS

Overview
Journal Protein J
Publisher Springer
Specialty Biochemistry
Date 2023 Aug 24
PMID 37620609
Authors
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Abstract

Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations are routinely performed of biomolecules in solution, because this is their native environment. However, the structures used in such simulations are often obtained with X-ray crystallography, which provides the atomic coordinates of the biomolecule in a crystal environment. With the advent of free electron lasers and time-resolved techniques, X-ray crystallography can now also access metastable states that are intermediates in a biochemical process. Such experiments provide additional data, which can be used, for example, to optimize MD force fields. Doing so requires that the simulation of the biomolecule is also performed in the crystal environment. However, in contrast to simulations of biomolecules in solution, setting up a crystal is challenging. In particular, because not all solvent molecules are resolved in X-ray crystallography, adding a suitable number of solvent molecules, such that the properties of the crystallographic unit cell are preserved in the simulation, can be difficult and typically is a trial-and-error based procedure requiring manual interventions. Such interventions preclude high throughput applications. To overcome this bottleneck, we introduce gmXtal, a tool for setting up crystal simulations for MD simulations with GROMACS. With the information from the protein data bank (rcsb.org) gmXtal automatically (i) builds the crystallographic unit cell; (ii) sets the protonation of titratable residues; (iii) builds missing residues that were not resolved experimentally; and (iv) adds an appropriate number of solvent molecules to the system. gmXtal is available as a standalone tool https://gitlab.com/pbuslaev/gmxtal .

Citing Articles

Functional protein dynamics in a crystal.

Klyshko E, Kim J, McGough L, Valeeva V, Lee E, Ranganathan R Nat Commun. 2024; 15(1):3244.

PMID: 38622111 PMC: 11018856. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-47473-4.


Functional Protein Dynamics in a Crystal.

Klyshko E, Kim J, McGough L, Valeeva V, Lee E, Ranganathan R bioRxiv. 2023; .

PMID: 37461732 PMC: 10350071. DOI: 10.1101/2023.07.06.548023.

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