New algorithms speed molecular simulations

Published: 21 August 2001 y., Tuesday
The technique could enable medical researchers to better predict the impact of drugs on cells "in silico", i.e. before any experiments on cells or animals. The researchers, led by a team at the University of California, San Diego, used a recent mathematical discovery to accelerate hugely the speed at which supercomputers can process the data needed to simulate electrostatic atomic interactions. This means that the number of atoms that can be modelled simultaneously has increased from around 10,000 to 1.2 million, allowing researchers to simulate biological activity at the level of molecules, not atoms. Electrostatic models show how charges on individual atoms interact to produce electric fields throughout a molecule. This can determine the motion and stability of molecules and help biologists, for example, understand protein behaviour and the effectiveness of drugs.
Šaltinis: newscientist.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Opportunity to Roll Onto Mars Surface

The Opportunity rover is on track to roll onto Mars (search) as early as Sunday, just days before its twin could resume its own work exploring the Red Planet, NASA said Wednesday. more »

Opportunity lands on Mars

Spirit 'upgraded from critical to serious' more »

Poland lifts US beef ban

Poland has become the first country to lift its ban on US beef, imposed after America's mad cow disease outbreak more »

Lake Balkhash drying up, UN warns Kazakhstan

16th-largest lake: Disaster feared as basin is drained for agriculture more »

EU, scientists tout Mars mission despite Beagle doubts

The EU has hailed the Mars Express mission as a major achievement for Europe more »

Mars mission lands to ominous silence

Europe successfully met its planned Christmas rendezvous with the planet Mars more »

Mars beckons for Beagle probe

Mission controllers are gearing up for the arrival of Europe's first mission to Mars more »

Islanders May Hold Key to Malaria Vaccine

Scientists may have discovered how to develop a vaccine to beat the killer disease malaria more »

Urgent action is needed to fight Aids

The head of the World Health Organisation (WHO) on Sunday urged rich nations to provide more money to fight Aids, which is devastating African nations more »

NASA Takes the Internet into Space

The Communications and Navigation Demonstration on Shuttle (CANDOS) project used a new low-power transceiver (LPT) on the shuttle to communicate with bases in New Mexico, Virginia and Florida more »