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3.1 Papers
Section Intro | Molecular modeling | Bioinformatics | docking | Methods and algorithms | Applications | Chronological list

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3.1.6.79 Totrov, M., and Abagyan, R. (2001). Rapid boundary element solvation electrostatics calculations in folding simulations: Successful folding of a 23-residue peptide. Biopolymers 2001;60(2):124-33

Solvation effects play a profound role in the energetics of protein folding. While a continuum dielectric model of solvation may provide a sufficiently accurate estimate of the solvation effects, until now this model was too computationally expensive and unstable for folding simulations. Here we proposed a fast yet accurate and robust implementation of the boundary element solution of the Poisson equation, the REBEL algorithm. Using our earlier double-energy scheme, we included for the first time the mathematically rigorous continuous REBEL solvation term in our Biased Probability Monte Carlo (BPMC) simulations of the peptide folding. The free energy of a 23-residue betabetaalpha-peptide was then globally optimized with and without the solvation electrostatics contribution. An ensemble of betabetaalpha conformations was found at and near the global minimum of the energy function with the REBEL electrostatic solvation term. Much poorer correspondence to the native solution structure was found in the "control" simulations with a traditional method to account for solvation via a distance-dependent dielectric constant. Each simulation took less than 40 h (21 h without electrostatic solvation calculation) on a single Alpha 677 MHz CPU and involved more than 40,000 solvation energy evaluations. This work demonstrates for the first time that such a simulation can be performed in a realistic time frame. The proposed procedure may eliminate the energy evaluation accuracy bottleneck in folding simulations.