Building insightful, memory-enriched models to capture long-time biochemical processes from short-time simulations Journal Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • The ability to predict and understand the complex molecular motions occurring over diverse timescales ranging from picoseconds to seconds and even hours occurring in biological systems remains one of the largest challenges to chemical theory. Markov State Models (MSMs), which provide a memoryless description of the transitions between different states of a biochemical system, have provided numerous important physically transparent insights into biological function. However, constructing these models often necessitates performing extremely long molecular simulations to converge the rates. Here we show that by incorporating memory via the time-convolutionless generalized master equation (TCL-GME) one can build a theoretically transparent and physically intuitive memory-enriched model of biochemical processes with up to a three orders of magnitude reduction in the simulation data required while also providing a higher temporal resolution. We derive the conditions under which the TCL-GME provides a more efficient means to capture slow dynamics than MSMs and rigorously prove when the two provide equally valid and efficient descriptions of the slow configurational dynamics. We further introduce a simple averaging procedure that enables our TCL-GME approach to quickly converge and accurately predict long-time dynamics even when parameterized with noisy reference data arising from short trajectories. We illustrate the advantages of the TCL-GME using alanine dipeptide, the human argonaute complex, and FiP35 WW domain.

publication date

  • October 20, 2022

has restriction

  • green

Date in CU Experts

  • October 27, 2022 8:22 AM

Full Author List

  • Dominic AJ; Sayer T; Cao S; Markland TE; Huang X; Montoya-Castillo A

author count

  • 6

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