Open AccessJournal Article
Using Harmonic Analysis and Optimization to Study Macromolecular Dynamics
TL;DR: Coarse-graining approaches enable one to simulate harmonic and anharmonic motions of large macromolecules in a PC, while all-atom based molecular dynamics simulation has been conventionally performed with an aid of supercomputer.
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Abstract: Mechanical system dynamics plays an important role in the area of computational structural biology. Elastic network models (ENMs) for macromolecules (e.g., polymers, proteins, and nucleic acids such as DNA and RNA) have been developed to understand the relationship between their structure and biological function. For example, a protein, which is basically a folded polypeptide chain, can be simply modeled as a mass-spring system from the mechanical viewpoint. Since the conformational flexibility of a protein is dominantly subject to its chemical bond interactions (e.g., covalent bonds, salt bridges, and hydrogen bonds), these constraints can be modeled as linear spring connections between spatially proximal representatives in a variety of coarse-grained ENMs. Coarse-graining approaches enable one to simulate harmonic and anharmonic motions of large macromolecules in a PC, while all-atom based molecular dynamics (MD) simulation has been conventionally performed with an aid of supercomputer. A harmonic analysis of a macroscopic mechanical system, called normal mode analysis, has been adopted to analyze thermal fluctuations of a microscopic biological system around its equilibrium state. Furthermore, a structure-based system optimization, called elastic network interpolation, has been developed to predict nonlinear transition (or folding) pathways between two different functional states of a same macromolecule. The good agreement of simulation and experiment allows the employment of coarse-grained ENMs as a versatile tool for the study of macromolecular dynamics.
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Citations
Efficient Transfer of Large-Area Graphene Films onto Rigid Substrates by Hot Pressing
Junmo Kang,Soonhwi Hwang,Jae Hwan Kim,Min Hyeok Kim,Jaechul Ryu,Sangjae Seo,Byung Hee Hong,Moon Ki Kim,Jae-Boong Choi +8 more
TL;DR: This work enhances the transfer efficiency of the large-area graphene films on a substrate with arbitrary thickness and rigidity and performs a theoretical multiscale simulation from continuum to atomic level to compare the mechanical stresses caused by the R2R and the hot-pressing methods.
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•Journal Article
Internal Fault Classification in Transformer Windings using Combination of Discrete Wavelet Transforms and Back-propagation Neural Networks
TL;DR: In this article, a combination of Discrete Wavelet Transformer Transformer and Neural Network for detecting and classification of internal faults in a two-winding three-phase transformer is presented.
A mass weighted chemical elastic network model elucidates closed form domain motions in proteins
Min Hyeok Kim,Sangjae Seo,Jay I. Jeong,Bum Joon Kim,Wing Kam Liu,Byeong Soo Lim,Jae-Boong Choi,Moon Ki Kim +7 more
TL;DR: A mass‐weighted chemical elastic network model (MWCENM) in which the total mass of each residue is assumed to be concentrated on the representative alpha carbon atom and various stiffness values are precisely assigned according to the types of chemical interactions.
Group theory of icosahedral virus capsid vibrations: a top-down approach.
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TL;DR: A normal mode analysis based on protein association energies is used to study the frequency spectrum, in which a universal plateau of low-frequency modes shared by a large class of Caspar-Klug capsids is revealed, potentially relevant to the genome release mechanism.
24
DNA nanotube formation based on normal mode analysis
Pengfei Qian,Sangjae Seo,Junghoon Kim,Seungjae Kim,Byeong Soo Lim,Wing Kam Liu,Bumjoon Kim,Thomas H. LaBean,Sung Ha Park,Moon Ki Kim +9 more
TL;DR: A theoretical study on why uncorrugated cross tiles self-assemble into counterintuitive 3D nanotube structures and not planar 2D lattices is presented.
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TL;DR: The goals of the PDB are described, the systems in place for data deposition and access, how to obtain further information and plans for the future development of the resource are described.
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