Re: AMBER: Need help... High energies for complex...

From: Waqas Nasir <nasirwaqas1983.yahoo.com>
Date: Thu, 4 Sep 2008 08:22:55 -0700 (PDT)

Hi,

Well, thanks a lot for the worthed help.

Let me explain the whole procedure that I have taken up, I have some doubts in the way I have separated the files and the first thing that came into my mind after these results was exactly that the top files are not corresponding to what is in the results.

Anyways, the sugar that I have is a tetra saccharide. I first constructed the sugar unit in xleap and added 3 bonds which were missing when I imported the pdb file into the xleap with glycam_06 force field (The reason being not able to find the exact residues in the glycam06 force field as are in the pdb file). Along side that I had a protein unit from the part of the pdb file which contained protein. I combined both units in xleap by combine command and then generated the prmtop and inpcrd files for the main complex on which I had all the minimization and md runs going on.

Secondly the script for generating frames generated 250 pdb files corresponding to the 250 frames that I had in the trajectory. I again repeated the same procedure using tleap and constructed a sugar subunit and a protein subunit for each frame and generated top and crd files separately for the two subunits in each frame. These files were then used for subsequent single point energy calculations.

Do you see mistakes in principle of the approach that has been taken up here???

Awaiting your response,
Thanks a lot,
Waqas.



----- Original Message ----
From: David A. Case <case.biomaps.rutgers.edu>
To: amber.scripps.edu
Sent: Thursday, September 4, 2008 5:36:37 PM
Subject: Re: AMBER: Need help... High energies for complex...

On Thu, Sep 04, 2008, Waqas Nasir wrote:
>
> Well, I have tried straight single point md on the complex,sugar and protein
> separately, and what I have found is as follows;

This is not what you should do, at least until you understand what is
going on. My suggestion (and Carlos'):

Make a single prmtop file for the complex. Use this prmtop file for
a single point calculation with two sets of coordinates: one with the ligand
(sugar) in its binding location, and a second set of coordinates where you
manually move the ligand to someplace distant from the protein, (but keep the
protein coordinates identical to what they were in the complex.

Once you see and understand how that works, you will be ready to try and
interpret other experiments.

...regards...dac

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Received on Sun Sep 07 2008 - 06:07:29 PDT
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