An Accurate and Efficient SAXS/SANS Implementation Including Solvation Layer Effects Suitable for Molecular Simulations.

07 August 2023, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Small-angle X-ray and neutron scattering (SAXS/SANS) provide valuable information on biomolecules in solution and are particularly well-suited to complement a wide range of structural techniques, including molecular dynamics simulations. As contrast-based techniques, they are sensitive not only to structural properties but also to the solvent-solute interactions. Their use in molecular dynamics simulations requires a forward model that should be as fast and accurate as possible. Here we show that it is possible to calculate SAXS and SANS using a coarse-grained representation of one bead per amino acid and three beads for nucleic acid with form factors that can be corrected on-the-fly to account for their interaction with the solvent at no additional computational cost. We use SAXS data measured for the closed state of Gelsolin and previous data for a UP1-microRNA complex to show that such approach allows to refine the structure and dynamics of proteins and nucleic acids. Our hybrid resolution small angle scattering (hySAS) implementation, being distributed in PLUMED, is ready to be coupled with atomistic and coarse-grained simulations using diverse restraining strategies.

Keywords

SAXS
SANS
solvent effects
gelsolin
UP1-microRNA complex
data-driven simulations

Supplementary materials

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Supporting Information
Description
Extensive comparison of the performance of MT, 1B, and AA representation for proteins (considering also SLC), as well as the same comparison for 3B and AA for nucleic acids. A table containing the list of PDB accession codes used to compute the 3B parameters. All the tables with the combinations of SASA threshold and the solvent density for SLC correction for both protein and nucleic acids. An RMSF plot for the GSN without SLC, and the ∆RMSF plot for the two simulations with and without SLC.
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