DocumentCode
424471
Title
Surveying Molecular Interactions with DOT
Author
Ten Eyck, Lynn F. ; Mandell, Jeffrey ; Roberts, Victoria A. ; Pique, Michael E.
Author_Institution
San Diego Supercomputer Center
fYear
1995
fDate
1995
Firstpage
22
Lastpage
22
Abstract
The purpose of the molecular interaction program DOT (Daughter of Turnip) is rapid computation of the electrostatic potential energy between two proteins or other charged molecules. DOT exhaustively tests all six degrees of freedom, rotational and translational, and produces a grid of approximate interaction energies and orientations. It is able to do this because the problem is cast as the convolution of the potential field of the first molecule and any rotated charge distribution of the second. The algorithm lends itself to both parallelization and vectorization, permitting huge increases in computational speed over other methods for obtaining the same information. For example, a complete mapping of interactions between plastocyanin and cytochrome c was done in eight minutes using 256 nodes of an Intel Paragon. DOT is expected to be particularly useful as a rapid screen to find configurations for more detailed study using exact energy models.
Keywords
convolutions; molecular interactions; parallel applications; Biological system modeling; Biology computing; Concurrent computing; Convolution; Electrostatics; Potential energy; Proteins; Supercomputers; Testing; US Department of Transportation; convolutions; molecular interactions; parallel applications;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Supercomputing, 1995. Proceedings of the IEEE/ACM SC95 Conference
Print_ISBN
0-89791-816-9
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/SUPERC.1995.242670
Filename
1383158
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