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GROMOS

GROMOS
Developer(s)Wilfred van Gunsteren. Philippe Hünenberger, Sereina Riniker, Chris Oostenbrink
Initial release1978; 46 years ago (1978)
Stable release
GROMOS 11 v1.5.0 / January 2021; 3 years ago (2021-01)
Written inFortran <= 1996,
C++ => 2011
Operating systemUnix-like
Platformx86
Available inEnglish
TypeMolecular dynamics
LicenseProprietary
Websitewww.gromos.net

GROningen MOlecular Simulation (GROMOS) is the name of a force field for molecular dynamics simulation, and a related computer software package. Both are developed at the University of Groningen, and at the Computer-Aided Chemistry Group[1] at the Laboratory for Physical Chemistry[2] at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH Zurich). At Groningen, Herman Berendsen was involved in its development.[3]

The united atom force field was optimized with respect to the condensed phase properties of alkanes.

Versions

GROMOS87

Aliphatic and aromatic hydrogen atoms were included implicitly by representing the carbon atom and attached hydrogen atoms as one group centered on the carbon atom, a united atom force field. The van der Waals force parameters were derived from calculations of the crystal structures of hydrocarbons, and on amino acids using short (0.8 nm) nonbonded cutoff radii.[4]

GROMOS96

In 1996, a substantial rewrite of the software package was released.[5][6] The force field was also improved, e.g., in the following way: aliphatic CHn groups were represented as united atoms with van der Waals interactions reparametrized on the basis of a series of molecular dynamics simulations of model liquid alkanes using long (1.4 nm) nonbonded cutoff radii.[7] This version is continually being refined and several different parameter sets are available. GROMOS96 includes studies of molecular dynamics, stochastic dynamics, and energy minimization. The energy component was also part of the prior GROMOS, named GROMOS87. GROMOS96 was planned and conceived during a time of 20 months. The package is made of 40 different programs, each with a different essential function. An example of two important programs within the GROMOS96 are PROGMT, in charge of constructing molecular topology and also PROPMT, changing the classical molecular topology into the path-integral molecular topology.

GROMOS05

An updated version of the software package was introduced in 2005.[8]

GROMOS11

The current GROMOS release is dated in May 2011.

Parameter sets

Some of the force field parameter sets that are based on the GROMOS force field. The A-version applies to aqueous or apolar solutions of proteins, nucleotides, and sugars. The B-version applies to isolated molecules (gas phase).

54

  • 54A7[9] - 53A6 taken and adjusted torsional angle terms to better reproduce helical propensities, altered N–H, C=O repulsion, new CH3 charge group, parameterisation of Na+ and Cl to improve free energy of hydration and new improper dihedrals.
  • 54B7[9] - 53B6 in vacuo taken and changed in same manner as 53A6 to 54A7.

53

  • 53A5[10] - optimised by first fitting to reproduce the thermodynamic properties of pure liquids of a range of small polar molecules and the solvation free enthalpies of amino acid analogs in cyclohexane, is an expansion and renumbering of 45A3.
  • 53A6[10] - 53A5 taken and adjusted partial charges to reproduce hydration free enthalpies in water, recommended for simulations of biomolecules in explicit water.

45

  • 45A3[11] - suitable to apply to lipid aggregates such as membranes and micelles, for mixed systems of aliphatics with or without water, for polymers, and other apolar systems that may interact with different biomolecules.
  • 45A4[12] - 45A3 reparameterised to improve DNA representation.

43

See also

References

  1. ^ Computer-Aided Chemistry Group, ETH Zurich
  2. ^ Laboratory for Physical Chemistry, ETH Zurich
  3. ^ "Berni J. Alder CECAM Prize". Centre européen de calcul atomique et moléculaire. Archived from the original on 13 April 2016. Retrieved 25 April 2016.
  4. ^ W. F. van Gunsteren and H. J. C. Berendsen, Groningen Molecular Simulation (GROMOS) Library Manual, BIOMOS b.v., Groningen, 1987.
  5. ^ van Gunsteren, W. F.; Billeter, S. R.; Eising, A. A.; Hünenberger, P. H.; Krüger, P.; Mark, A. E.; Scott, W. R. P.; Tironi, I. G. Biomolecular Simulation: The GROMOS96 Manual and User Guide; vdf Hochschulverlag AG an der ETH Zürich and BIOMOS b.v.: Zürich, Groningen, 1996.
  6. ^ "The GROMOS Biomolecular Simulation Program Package", W. R. P. Scott, P. H. Huenenberger, I. G. Tironi, A. E. Mark, S. R. Billeter, J. Fennen, A. E. Torda, T. Huber, P. Krueger and W. F. van Gunsteren. J. Phys. Chem. A, 103, 3596–3607.
  7. ^ "An improved GROMOS96 force field for aliphatic hydrocarbons in the condensed phase". Journal of Computational Chemistry 22 (11), August 2001, 1205–1218 by Lukas D. Schuler, Xavier Daura, Wilfred F. van Gunsteren.
  8. ^ "The GROMOS software for biomolecular simulation: GROMOS05". Christen M, Hünenberger PH, Bakowies D, Baron R, Bürgi R, Geerke DP, Heinz TN, Kastenholz MA, Kräutler V, Oostenbrink C, Peter C, Trzesniak D, van Gunsteren WF. J Comput Chem 26 (16): 1719–51 PMID 16211540
  9. ^ a b Schmid N., Eichenberger A., Choutko A., Riniker S., Winger M., Mark A. & van Gunsteren W., "Definition and testing of the GROMOS force-field versions 54A7 and 54B7", European Biophysics Journal, 40(7), (2011), 843–856 [1].
  10. ^ a b Oostenbrink C., Villa, A., Mark, A. E., and van Gunsteren, W., "A biomolecular force field based on the free enthalpy of hydration and solvation: the GROMOS force-field parameter sets 53A5 and 53A6", Journal of Computational Chemistry, 25, (2004), 1656–1676 [2].
  11. ^ Schuler, L. D., Daura, X., and van Gusteren, W. F., An improved GROMOS96 force field for aliphatic hydrocarbons in the condensed phase, Journal of Computational Chemistry 22(11), (2001), 1205–1218 [3].
  12. ^ Soares, T. A., Hünenberger, P. H., Kastenholz, M. A., Kräutler, V., Lenz, T., Lins, R. D., Oostenbrink, C., and van Gunsteren, W. F., An improved nucleic acid parameter set for the GROMOS force field, Journal of Computational Chemistry, 26(7), (2005), 725–737, [4].
  13. ^ a b van Gunsteren, W. F., Billeter, S. R., Eking, A. A., Hiinenberger, P. H., Kriiger, P., Mark, A. E., Scott, W. R. P. and Tironi, I. G., Biomolecular Simulation, The GROMOS96 Manual and User Guide, vdf Hochschulverlag AG an der ETH Ziirich and BIOMOS b.v., Zurich, Groningen, 1996.
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