Frontiers in Chemistry (Mar 2021)

Conformational Shifts of Stacked Heteroaromatics: Vacuum vs. Water Studied by Machine Learning

  • Johannes R. Loeffler,
  • Monica L. Fernández-Quintero,
  • Franz Waibl,
  • Patrick K. Quoika,
  • Florian Hofer,
  • Michael Schauperl,
  • Klaus R. Liedl

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fchem.2021.641610
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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Stacking interactions play a crucial role in drug design, as we can find aromatic cores or scaffolds in almost any available small molecule drug. To predict optimal binding geometries and enhance stacking interactions, usually high-level quantum mechanical calculations are performed. These calculations have two major drawbacks: they are very time consuming, and solvation can only be considered using implicit solvation. Therefore, most calculations are performed in vacuum. However, recent studies have revealed a direct correlation between the desolvation penalty, vacuum stacking interactions and binding affinity, making predictions even more difficult. To overcome the drawbacks of quantum mechanical calculations, in this study we use neural networks to perform fast geometry optimizations and molecular dynamics simulations of heteroaromatics stacked with toluene in vacuum and in explicit solvation. We show that the resulting energies in vacuum are in good agreement with high-level quantum mechanical calculations. Furthermore, we show that using explicit solvation substantially influences the favored orientations of heteroaromatic rings thereby emphasizing the necessity to include solvation properties starting from the earliest phases of drug design.

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