February 13, 2018
Journal Article

Atomic radius and charge parameter uncertainty in biomolecular solvation energy calculations

Abstract

Atomic radii and charges are two major parameters used in implicit solvent electrostatics and energy calculations. The optimization problem for charges and radii is under-determined, leading to uncertainty in the values of these parameters and in the results of solvation energy calculations using these parameters. This paper presents a method for quantifying this uncertainty in solvation energies using surrogate models based on generalized polynomial chaos (gPC) expansions. There are relatively few atom types used to specify radii parameters in implicit solvation calculations; therefore, surrogate models for these low-dimensional spaces could be constructed using least-squares fitting. However, there are many more types of atomic charges; therefore, construction of surrogate models for the charge parameter space required compressed sensing combined with an iterative rotation method to enhance problem sparsity. We present results for the uncertainty in small molecule solvation energies based on these approaches. Additionally, we explore the correlation between uncertainties due to radii and charges which motivates the need for future work in uncertainty quantification methods for high-dimensional parameter spaces.

Revised: August 13, 2020 | Published: February 13, 2018

Citation

Yang X., H. Lei, P. Gao, D.G. Thomas, D.L. Mobley, and N.A. Baker. 2018. Atomic radius and charge parameter uncertainty in biomolecular solvation energy calculations. Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation 14, no. 2:759-767. PNNL-SA-126404. doi:10.1021/acs.jctc.7b00905