Application of the Systematic Molecular Fragmentation by Annihilation
Method to ab Initio NMR Chemical Shift Calculations
Version 2 2018-11-26, 18:51Version 2 2018-11-26, 18:51
Version 1 2018-11-13, 04:13Version 1 2018-11-13, 04:13
Posted on 2018-11-26 - 18:51
NMR is a powerful tool for obtaining
information on the structural characterization and dynamics of proteins,
and nucleic acids, and their complexes. The complexity of the spectra
is such that elucidation through computational simulation is a much
desired thing. However, the size of most structures of interest is
such that they remain out of reach of accurate quantum chemical techniques.
Fragmentation methods have been shown to be a viable means of reducing
the cost of ab initio calculations to enable the
prediction of molecular properties of large systems to chemical accuracy.
We look at the systematic molecular fragmentation by annihilation
method for a model peptide system and show that this procedure reproduces
the shielding constants of a full calculation at only a fraction of
the cost. Discussion of the considerations needed in applying this
method is discussed and comparison made with the results of the similar
fragment molecular orbital and ONIOM methods.
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Kobayashi, Rika; Amos, Roger D.; Reid, David M.; Collins, Michael A. (2018). Application of the Systematic Molecular Fragmentation by Annihilation
Method to ab Initio NMR Chemical Shift Calculations. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpca.8b09565Â