Identifying Systematic Force Field Errors Using a 3D-RISM Element Counting Correction

Molecules. 2023 Jan 17;28(3):925. doi: 10.3390/molecules28030925.

Abstract

Hydration free energies of small molecules are commonly used as benchmarks for solvation models. However, errors in predicting hydration free energies are partially due to the force fields used and not just the solvation model. To address this, we have used the 3D reference interaction site model (3D-RISM) of molecular solvation and existing benchmark explicit solvent calculations with a simple element count correction (ECC) to identify problems with the non-bond parameters in the general AMBER force field (GAFF). 3D-RISM was used to calculate hydration free energies of all 642 molecules in the FreeSolv database, and a partial molar volume correction (PMVC), ECC, and their combination (PMVECC) were applied to the results. The PMVECC produced a mean unsigned error of 1.01±0.04kcal/mol and root mean squared error of 1.44±0.07kcal/mol, better than the benchmark explicit solvent calculations from FreeSolv, and required less than 15 s of computing time per molecule on a single CPU core. Importantly, parameters for PMVECC showed systematic errors for molecules containing Cl, Br, I, and P. Applying ECC to the explicit solvent hydration free energies found the same systematic errors. The results strongly suggest that some small adjustments to the Lennard-Jones parameters for GAFF will lead to improved hydration free energy calculations for all solvent models.

Keywords: 3D-RISM; Lennard–Jones; conformational sampling; force field; generalized Born; hydration free energy; implicit solvent; partial molar volume; solvation; volume correction.

Grants and funding

This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF) under Grants CHE-2102668 and CHE-2018427.