Department of Biosciences and Bioengineering
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Browsing Department of Biosciences and Bioengineering by Subject "Ab Initio Quantum Calculation"
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Item Monovalent (K+/Na+) and Divalent (Mg 2+/Ca 2+) metal ion selectivity in Group II intron and Cas1 Protein(2022) Kumar, AbhishekMetal ions play crucial roles in biological processes (e.g., catalytic activity, structural stability, transportation, homeostasis, muscle contraction, etc.). Thus, metal-ion selectivity is essential for the function and stability of the biomolecules. This dissertation explores the use of combined classical molecular dynamics (MD) and ab initio quantum chemical calculations to estimate the energetics of metal ion selectivity (K* vs. Na+, Mg2+ vs. Ca2+) in group Il intron and cas1 protein. Considering X-ray structures of metal-ion bound biomacromolecule (group Il intron and casl protein) as a template, the strength of selectivity (AAG= Free energy difference between cognate vs. nearcognate metal binding to the active site of the biomolecule) was estimated using MD free energy simulations employing appropriate thermodynamic cycles. Classical force-fields are limited by the fact that it does not include electronic polarizability explicitly. Instead of using computationally expensive polarizable force-field, quantum chemical ab initio calculations were performed on the reduced model of the metal ion binding pocket to incorporate the polarization effect. The adopted methodology (combining classical MD and quantum chemical calculation) is not only computationally cheap but also successful in establishing a direct link between the estimated energetics and the 3D structures of cognate and near-cognate metal complexes.