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RDKit to params

Create or modify Rosetta params files (topology files) from scratch, RDKit mols or another params file.

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Installation

To install from pip type:

pip install rdkit-to-params

To install the latest version (probably the same) from GitHub

pip install git+https://github.com/matteoferla/rdkit_to_params

RDKit and PyRosetta are optional module, but most of the useful functionality comes from the former. To install rdkit, conda install -c conda-forge rdkit or apt-get or pip install rdkit-pypi. To install PyRosetta you need to get a licence (free for academic use) and install it. One option for installation without visiting the Rosetta Commons site is:

pip install pyrosetta_help; PYROSETTA_USERNAME='👾👾👾' PYROSETTA_PASSWORD='👾👾👾' install_pyrosetta

Rationale

This is a fresh rewrite of mol_to_params.py. For three reasons:

It sounds mad, but did not actually take too long.

Website

For a web app using this see https://direvo.mutanalyst.com/params. For the code running the website, see:

Roundtrip

Native amino acid params files can be found in the Rosetta folder rosetta/main/database/chemical/residue_type_sets/fa_standard/residue_types/l-caa Let's do a roundtrip changing an atomname:

import pyrosetta
pyrosetta.init(extra_options='-mute all') # required for test
from rdkit_to_params import Params

p = Params.load('PHE.params')
p.IO_STRING[0].name3 = 'PHX'
p.IO_STRING[0].name1 = 'Z'
p.AA = 'UNK'  #If it's not one of the twenty (plus extras), UNK!
del p.ROTAMER_AA[0]
p.rename_atom(' CB ', ' CX ') # this renames
p.dump('fake.params')
p.test().dump_pdb('test.pdb')

p.test() returns a pyrosetta pose. The static method params_to_pose('something.params', name3) accepts a params file

import nglview
pose = Params.params_to_pose('some_topology_I_found.params', name3)
view = nglview.show_rosetta(pose)
view

From mol object

Requirements

For the sake of sanity, EmbedMolecule, Chem.AddHs(mol) or any other operation is assumed to have been done beforehand. And that the user is going to do Chem.MolToPDBFile(params.mol) or Chem.MolToPDBBlock(params.mol) or use the bound methods of Params, dump_pdb and dump_pdb_conf (see below).

The molecule should preferably be not Kekulised. 3letter name of residue is either from the title row (_Name) if a 3letter word or from the PDBInfo or 'LIG'.

Dummy atom (*/R) is assumed to be a CONNECT —ligand only atm.

Here is a conversion to an amino acid from a SMILES (quickest way):

import pyrosetta
pyrosetta.init(extra_options='-mute all')
from rdkit_to_params import Params
p = Params.from_smiles('*C(=O)C(Cc1ccccc1)[NH]*', #recognised as amino acid.
        name='PHX', #optional.
        atomnames={3: 'CZ'} #optional, rando atom name as see in previous edit
        )
print(p.is_aminoacid()) # True
p.dump('fake.params')
p.test().dump_pdb('test.pdb')
Chem.MolToPDBFile(mol, 'ref.pdb')
        

Here is a conversion to a ligand the circuitous way, just for fun:

import pyrosetta
pyrosetta.init(extra_options='-mute all')
# note that pyrosetta needs to be started before rdkit.
from rdkit_to_params import Params
# make the molecule in RDKit or chemdraw or download it or whatever.
mol = Chem.MolFromSmiles('NC(C(=O)O)Cc1ccccc1')
mol = AllChem.AddHs(mol)
AllChem.EmbedMolecule(mol)
AllChem.MMFFOptimizeMolecule(mol)
# add names to the mol beforehand
Params.add_names(mol, names=['N', 'CA', 'C', 'O', 'OXT', 'CB'], name='PHZ')
# parameterise
p = Params.from_mol(mol, name='PHZ')
p.test().dump_pdb('test.pdb')
Chem.MolToPDBFile('ref.pdb')

The class method add_names is based upon atom index (which is derived from the SMILES or sdf/mol file unless atoms have been replaced). The instance method rename_by_substructure accepts a substructure and a list of atom names in the order they are in the substructure.

Note that conformer generation is not fully automatic and is not done by default.

# make your conformers as you desire
AllChem.EmbedMultipleConfs(mol, numConfs=10) # or whatever you choose. This is a somewhat important decision.
AllChem.AlignMolConformers(mol) # I do not know if the conformers need to be aligned for Rosetta
# params time!
p = Params.from_mol(mol, name='LIG') 
p.dump_pdb_conf('LIG_conf.pdb')
p.PDB_ROTAMERS.append('LIG_conf.pdb')
p.dump('my_params.params')

Note dump_pdb and dump_pdb_conf will save the molecule(s) without the dummy atoms, to stop this add stripped=False.

From SMILES string

The above is actually a bit convoluted for example purposes as Params.from_smiles, accepts a SMILES string.

From SMILES string and PDB for names

In some cases one has a PDB file with a ligand that needs parameterising. Assuming one has also the smiles of the ligand (PubChem has an super easy search), one can do

p = Params.from_smiles_w_pdbfile(pdb_file, smiles, 'XXX') # the name has to match.

The smiles does not need to match full. It can contain more atoms or even one* (CONNECT). The smiles gets parameterised. So be suse to add correct charges properly —hydrogens are added. It could be used for scaffold hopping, but if position matters so much, you may be interested in Fragmenstein.

For more see autogenerated documentation. Sphinx with markdown cannot deal with typehinting, so checking the code might be clearer.

Rename

A key part is the atom names ——this can happen at . The following renaming methods are present:

Note, retype_by_name does not have all these options (only atomname -> Rosetta atomtype).

The class method add_names simply uses these, but returns a mol

DIY

If you have two mol objects from whatever routes, the basic operation is:

p = Params.load_mol(mol, generic=False, name='LIG')
p.rename_from_template(template) # or whatever middle step

p.convert_mol()

Note that convert_mol should be called once and is already called in the two from_XXX classmethods.

p = Params.from_mol(...)
p.convert_mol() # No!!!
p.mol # is the mol...
p2 = Params.load_mol(p.mol)
p2.convert_mol() # Yes

Constraints

The selfstanding class Constraints is for generating constraint files, which are a must with covalent attachments in order to stop janky topologies. The class is instantiated with a pair of SMILES, each with at least a real atom and with one attachment point, the first is the ligand and the second is its peptide target. The names of the heavy atoms and the Rosetta residue "numbers".

from rdkit_to_params import Constraints
c = Constraints(smiles=('*C(=N)', '*SC'), names= ['*', 'CX', 'NY', '*', 'SG', 'CB'], ligand_res= '1B', target_res='145A')
c.dump('con.con')
# individual strings can be accessed
c.atom_pair_constraint
c.angle_constraint
c.dihedral_constaint
c.custom_constaint # if you want to add your own before `str`, `.dumps`, `.dump`.

Do note that to make covalent links work in Rosetta, NGL and a few other places you need a LINK record, here is a f-string for it:

f'LINK        {target_atom: >4} {target_resn: >3} {p_chain[:1]} {target_resi: >3}                '+\
f'{ligand_atom: >4} {ligand_resn: >3} {ligand_chain[:1]} {ligand_resi: >3}     1555   1555  1.8\n'

This is not to be confused with CCP4 REFMAC's LINKR, which are however easy to covert. Alternatively, you can add it after importing the pose, cf. pose.residue(lig_pos).connect_map.

Bond order

It is worth mentioning that the bond order specified in the topology file in the BOND_ORDER lines is mostly ignored and the bond order is derived from the rosetta types that get assigned. To extract and correct a ligand, consider the following

# pose to string
buffer = pyrosetta.rosetta.std.stringbuf()
pose.dump_pdb(pyrosetta.rosetta.std.ostream(buffer))
pdbblock = buffer.str()
# get the residue
mol = Chem.MolFromPDBBlock(pdbblock, proximityBonding=False, removeHs=False)
ligand = Chem.SplitMolByPDBResidues(mol, whiteList=[params.NAME])[params.NAME]
# fix bond order
template = AllChem.DeleteSubstructs(params.mol, Chem.MolFromSmiles('*'))
AllChem.AssignBondOrdersFromTemplate(template, ligand)

Amino acids

A *C(=O)C([*:3])[NH]* molecule, where R3 is whatever sidechain is automatically converted into an amino acid. Omitting the hydrogen on the amine is fine (implicit), so *C(=O)C([*:3])N* is also automatically accepted. Likewise, a secondary amine like in proline, *C(=O)C1CCCN1*, is automatically determined to be an amino acid. Omitting the double bond of the carboxyl will result in a hydroxyl backbones amino acid, which will behave like C=[OH+] for properties, but without the partial charge. The criterion for an amino acid is if the substracture *NCC(~O)* is matched (see _aminoacid_override).

However, C(=O)C([*:3])[NH] will be parsed as [CH](=O)C([*:3])[NH], i.e. with a radical amine and an aldehyde.

Here is an example of making a sequence with a custom residue (without writing to file):

import nglview as nv
from rdkit_to_params import Params
import pyrosetta

# make params
p = Params.from_smiles('CCCCC(N*)C(*)=O', name='NLE')
p.PROPERTIES.append('ALIPHATIC')
p.PROPERTIES.append('HYDROPHOBIC')
# p.test() would test it in isolation.

# add to pose
pose = pyrosetta.Pose()
rst = p.add_residuetype(pose)
pyrosetta.rosetta.core.pose.make_pose_from_sequence(pose, 'AX[NLE]A', rst)

# relax and show
scorefxn = pyrosetta.get_fa_scorefxn()
relax = pyrosetta.rosetta.protocols.relax.FastRelax(scorefxn, 15)
relax.apply(pose)
nv.show_rosetta(pose)

Greek

In the amino acid case, the class attribute greekification changes the atomnames to CB, CD2 etc. It is by default True. It is called during fix_mol, a step in load_mol/load_smiles, so should be safe for rename methods.

Optionals

Installing RDKit with conda is easy (conda install rdkit). With apt-get likewise (sudo apt-get install python3-rdkit librdkit1 rdkit-data). With brew idem (brew install rdkit --with-python3). But there is always a system where one needs to compile it from source, which is a pain. Hence why it is optional. For example, I have never tried installing it on a Windows.

Pyrosetta is optional because it has a non-standard installation.

Terminal caps

To make a cap, there is a quick way:

p = Params.from_smiles('*NCC', name='CAP', atomnames={1: ' N  ', 2: ' CA '})
p.make_C_terminal_cap(mainchain_atoms=['N', 'CA'])

p = Params.from_smiles('*C(=O)C', name='CAP', atomnames={1: ' C  ', 2: ' O  ', 3: ' CA '})
p.make_N_terminal_cap(mainchain_atoms=['C', 'CA'])

These methods also accept connection_idx, which is the Fortran-style index of the connection that will become a LOWER/UPPER. i.e. if the cap is further connected but not as a polymer, say *NCC*.

Do note:

Caveat: I do not know many things!

Chemical

I suspect I am doing stuff weirdly and I am meant to create ligands via pyrosetta.rosetta.core.chemical and not via params files... If this is so let me know. I don't mind knowing I made a mistake!

Edit: it is indeed possible, but it is far from trivial/sane. The class pyrosetta.rosetta.core.chemical.MutableResidueType can be operated upon by various other classes such as pyrosetta.rosetta.core.chemical.SetAtomicCharge. A mutable residue type can be converted to a regular residue type via .make().

Generic

I like this generic atom type business, but I am not sure how to use them in RL. from_mol(mol, generic=True) will make generic atom types. I made several guesses with the classic atom types and I am sure many things are wrong...

Rings and cis-trans

Notes

There are some other things to pay attention to:

To Do

I have not coded yet, because I forgot:

The from_mol class method recognises *[NH]CC(~O)* and assigns it as a backbone properly. However, Chem.MolFromSmiles('*[NH]CC(~O)*') cannot be embedded, so is a bit of a horrible one for users to use. Throughout the code, dummy atoms (*/R) are changed to carbons or chlorines and then changed back. Cystathionine and similar twinned amino acids are the problem as I cannot simply make an amino acid backbone be recognised, however if protonated as is the case [NH1]C[CH0](=O). Maybe the CC(=O)NCC(=O)NC option may be a better choice after all.

Footnote

To save a ResidueType in PyRosetta to a params file, the command is:

pyrosetta.rosetta.core.chemical.write_topology_file(residuetype, 'foo.params')  # noqa

Legal Disclaimer

The author, Matteo Ferla, is not affiliated with either Rosetta or RDKit.

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