Abstract
We present a new benchmark set of metalloenzyme model reaction energies and barrier heights, which we call MME55. The set contains ten different enzymes, representing eight transition metals, both open and closed shell systems, and system sizes of up to 116 atoms. We use four DLPNO-CCSD(T)-based approaches to calculate reference values, against which we then benchmark the performance of a range of density functional approximations with and without dispersion corrections. Dispersion corrections improve the results across the board, and triple-ζ basis sets provide the best balance of efficiency and accuracy. Jacob's ladder is reproduced for the whole set based on averaged mean absolute (percentage) deviations, with the double hybrids SOS0-PBE0-2-D3(BJ) and revDOD-PBEP86-D4 standing out as the most accurate methods for the MME55 set. The range-separated hybrids ωB97M-V and ωB97X-V also perform well here and can be recommended as a reliable compromise between accuracy and efficiency; they have already been shown to be robust across many other types of chemical problems as well. Despite the popularity of B3LYP in computational enzymology, it is not a strong performer on our benchmark set, and we discourage its use for enzyme energetics.
Supplementary materials
Title
SI part 1: Additional data
Description
SI part 1: Details of the cut model of perchlorate
reductase; FOD plots for all structures;
additional tests of estimated DLPNO-CCSD(T1) approaches; additional benchmarking
analysis and discussion
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Title
SI part 2: data
Description
SI part 2: data
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Title
SI part 3: structures
Description
SI part 3: structures
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