337 research outputs found
Performance of the Cell processor for biomolecular simulations
The new Cell processor represents a turning point for computing intensive
applications. Here, I show that for molecular dynamics it is possible to reach
an impressive sustained performance in excess of 30 Gflops with a peak of 45
Gflops for the non-bonded force calculations, over one order of magnitude
faster than a single core standard processor
Multiscale modelling of liquids with molecular specificity
The separation between molecular and mesoscopic length and time scales poses
a severe limit to molecular simulations of mesoscale phenomena. We describe a
hybrid multiscale computational technique which address this problem by keeping
the full molecular nature of the system where it is of interest and
coarse-graining it elsewhere. This is made possible by coupling molecular
dynamics with a mesoscopic description of realistic liquids based on Landau's
fluctuating hydrodynamics. We show that our scheme correctly couples
hydrodynamics and that fluctuations, at both the molecular and continuum
levels, are thermodynamically consistent. Hybrid simulations of sound waves in
bulk water and reflected by a lipid monolayer are presented as illustrations of
the scheme
La riabilitazione termale nel 150° Anniversario dell'Unità d'Italia. Un testimonial d'eccezione: Giuseppe Garibaldi.
Nellâanno in cui si celebra il 150° Anniversario dellâUnitĂ dâItalia, il riemergere di alcune lettere di Giuseppe Garibaldi - che fanno riferimento ad un periodo di cure termali effettuato presso le Terme della Ficoncella e di Traiano (vicino Civitavecchia, Roma) - ci ha dato lo spunto per questo lavoro che intende considerare i numerosi trattamenti effettuati presso diverse stazioni termali italiane dallâEroe dei Due Mondi per una patologia reumatica (probabilmente una poliartrite reumatoide) e per gli esiti di varie ferite di guerra, in particolare la ben nota ferita da arma da fuoco subita a livello dellâarto inferiore destro nel corso della battaglia dâAspromonte, nel 1862
The impact of accelerator processors for high-throughput molecular modeling and simulation
Accepted versio
Determination of the chemical potential using energy-biased sampling
An energy-biased method to evaluate ensemble averages requiring test-particle
insertion is presented. The method is based on biasing the sampling within the
subdomains of the test-particle configurational space with energies smaller
than a given value freely assigned. These energy-wells are located via unbiased
random insertion over the whole configurational space and are sampled using the
so called Hit&Run algorithm, which uniformly samples compact regions of any
shape immersed in a space of arbitrary dimensions. Because the bias is defined
in terms of the energy landscape it can be exactly corrected to obtain the
unbiased distribution. The test-particle energy distribution is then combined
with the Bennett relation for the evaluation of the chemical potential. We
apply this protocol to a system with relatively small probability of low-energy
test-particle insertion, liquid argon at high density and low temperature, and
show that the energy-biased Bennett method is around five times more efficient
than the standard Bennett method. A similar performance gain is observed in the
reconstruction of the energy distribution.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Kinetic characterization of the critical step in HIV-1 protease maturation
HIV maturation requires multiple cleavage of long polyprotein chains into functional proteins that include the viral protease itself. Initial cleavage by the protease dimer occurs from within these precursors, and yet only a single protease monomer is embedded in each polyprotein chain. Self-activation has been proposed to start from a partially dimerized protease formed from monomers of different chains binding its own N termini by self-association to the active site, but a complete structural understanding of this critical step in HIV maturation is missing. Here, we captured the critical self-association of immature HIV-1 protease to its extended amino-terminal recognition motif using large-scale molecular dynamics simulations, thus confirming the postulated intramolecular mechanism in atomic detail. We show that self-association to a catalytically viable state requires structural cooperativity of the flexible ÎČ-hairpin âflapâ regions of the enzyme and that the major transition pathway is first via self-association in the semiopen/open enzyme states, followed by enzyme conformational transition into a catalytically viable closed state. Furthermore, partial N-terminal threading can play a role in self-association, whereas wide opening of the flaps in concert with self-association is not observed. We estimate the association rate constant (k(on)) to be on the order of âŒ1 Ă 10(4) s(â1), suggesting that N-terminal self-association is not the rate-limiting step in the process. The shown mechanism also provides an interesting example of molecular conformational transitions along the association pathway
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