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What Markov State Models Can and Cannot Do: Correlation versus Path-Based Observables in Protein-Folding Models

  1. Author:
    Suarez Alvarez,Ernesto
    Wiewiora, Rafal P.
    Wehmeyer, Chris
    Noe, Frank
    Chodera, John D.
    Zuckerman, Daniel M.
  2. Author Address

    Frederick Natl Lab Canc Res, Adv Biomed Computat Sci, Frederick, MD 21702 USA.Mem Sloan Kettering Canc Ctr, Sloan Kettering Inst, Computat & Syst Biol Program, New York, NY 10065 USA.Free Univ Berlin, D-14195 Berlin, Germany.Oregon Hlth & Sci Univ, Dept Biomed Engn, Portland, OR 97239 USA.
    1. Year: 2021
    2. Date: May 11
    3. Epub Date: 2021 04 27
  1. Journal: Journal of chemical theory and computation
  2. AMER CHEMICAL SOC,
    1. 17
    2. 5
    3. Pages: 3119-3133
  3. Type of Article: Article
  4. ISSN: 1549-9618
  1. Abstract:

    Markov state models (MSMs) have been widely applied to study the kinetics and pathways of protein conformational dynamics based on statistical analysis of molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. These MSMs coarse-grain both configuration space and time in ways that limit what kinds of observables they can reproduce with high fidelity over different spatial and temporal resolutions. Despite their popularity, there is still limited understanding of which biophysical observables can be computed from these MSMs in a robust and unbiased manner, and which suffer from the space-time coarse-graining intrinsic in the MSM model. Most theoretical arguments and practical validity tests for MSMs rely on long-time equilibrium kinetics, such as the slowest relaxation time scales and experimentally observable time-correlation functions. Here, we perform an extensive assessment of the ability of well-validated protein folding MSMs to accurately reproduce path-based observable such as mean first-passage times (MFPTs) and transition path mechanisms compared to a direct trajectory analysis. We also assess a recently proposed class of history-augmented MSMs (haMSMs) that exploit additional information not accounted for in standard MSMs. We conclude with some practical guidance on the use of MSMs to study various problems in conformational dynamics of biomolecules. In brief, MSMs can accurately reproduce correlation functions slower than the lag time, but path-based observables can only be reliably reproduced if the lifetimes of states exceed the lag time, which is a much stricter requirement. Even in the presence of short-lived states, we find that haMSMs reproduce path-based observables more reliably.

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External Sources

  1. DOI: 10.1021/acs.jctc.0c01154
  2. PMID: 33904312
  3. WOS: 000651540200035

Library Notes

  1. Fiscal Year: FY2020-2021
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