Michelle Hatch Hummel, Bihua Yu, Carlos Simmerling, Evangelos A Coutsias
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Explicit solvent molecular dynamics simulations of a macromolecule are slow as the number of solvent atoms considered typically increases by order of magnitude. Implicit methods introduce surface-dependent corrections to the force field, gaining speed at the expense of accuracy. Properties such as molecular interface surfaces, volumes and cavities are captured by Laguerre tessellations of macromolecules. However, Laguerre cells of exterior atoms tend to be overly large or unbounded. Our method, the inclusion-exclusion based Laguerre-Intersection method, caps cells in a physically accurate manner by considering the intersection of the space-filling diagram with the Laguerre tessellation. We optimize an adjustable parameter, the weight, to ensure the areas and volumes of capped cells exposed to solvent are as close as possible, on average, to those computed from equilibrated explicit solvent simulations. The contact planes are radical planes, meaning that as the solvent weight is varied, interior cells remain constant. We test the consistency of our model using a high-quality trajectory of HIV-protease, a dimer with flexible loops and open-close transitions. We also compare our results with interval-arithmetic Gauss-Bonnet based method. Optimal solvent parameters quickly converge, which we use to illustrate the increased fidelity of the Laguerre-Intersection method over two recently proposed methods as compared to the explicit model.
期刊介绍:
The International Journal of Computational Geometry & Applications (IJCGA) is a quarterly journal devoted to the field of computational geometry within the framework of design and analysis of algorithms.
Emphasis is placed on the computational aspects of geometric problems that arise in various fields of science and engineering including computer-aided geometry design (CAGD), computer graphics, constructive solid geometry (CSG), operations research, pattern recognition, robotics, solid modelling, VLSI routing/layout, and others. Research contributions ranging from theoretical results in algorithm design — sequential or parallel, probabilistic or randomized algorithms — to applications in the above-mentioned areas are welcome. Research findings or experiences in the implementations of geometric algorithms, such as numerical stability, and papers with a geometric flavour related to algorithms or the application areas of computational geometry are also welcome.