Literature DB >> 16280616

A methodology for efficiently sampling the conformation space of molecular structures.

Audrey Lee1, Ileana Streinu, Oliver Brock.   

Abstract

Motivated by recently developed computational techniques for studying protein flexibility, and their potential applications in docking, we propose an efficient method for sampling the conformational space of complex molecular structures. We focus on the loop closure problem, identified in the work of Thorpe and Lei (2004 Phil. Mag. 84 1323-31) as a primary bottleneck in the fast simulation of molecular motions. By modeling a molecular structure as a branching robot, we use an intuitive method in which the robot holds onto itself for maintaining loop constraints. New conformations are generated by applying random external forces, while internal, attractive forces pull the loops closed. Our implementation, tested on several model molecules with low number of degrees of freedom but many interconnected loops, gives promising results that show an almost four times speed-up on the benchmark cube-molecule of Thorpe and Lei.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16280616     DOI: 10.1088/1478-3975/2/4/S05

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Phys Biol        ISSN: 1478-3967            Impact factor:   2.583


  3 in total

1.  Union of geometric constraint-based simulations with molecular dynamics for protein structure prediction.

Authors:  Tyler J Glembo; S Banu Ozkan
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  2010-03-17       Impact factor: 4.033

2.  Protein loop modeling by using fragment assembly and analytical loop closure.

Authors:  Julian Lee; Dongseon Lee; Hahnbeom Park; Evangelos A Coutsias; Chaok Seok
Journal:  Proteins       Date:  2010-09-24

3.  Assessing protein loop flexibility by hierarchical Monte Carlo sampling.

Authors:  Jerome Nilmeier; Lan Hua; Evangelos A Coutsias; Matthew P Jacobson
Journal:  J Chem Theory Comput       Date:  2011-05-10       Impact factor: 6.006

  3 in total

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