Publications by authors named "B Isralewitz"

Over the past 18 months, the need to perform atomic detail molecular dynamics simulations of the SARS-CoV-2 virion, its spike protein, and other structures related to the viral infection cycle has led biomedical researchers worldwide to urgently seek out all available biomolecular structure information, appropriate molecular modeling and simulation software, and the necessary computing resources to conduct their work. We describe our experiences from several COVID-19 research collaborations and the challenges they presented in terms of our molecular modeling software development and support efforts, our laboratory's local computing environment, and our scientists' use of non-traditional HPC hardware platforms such as public clouds for large scale parallel molecular dynamics simulations.

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Conversion of sunlight into chemical energy, namely photosynthesis, is the primary energy source of life on Earth. A visualization depicting this process, based on multiscale computational models from electronic to cell scales, is presented in the form of an excerpt from the fulldome show . This accessible visual narrative shows a lay audience, including children, how the energy of sunlight is captured, converted, and stored through a chain of proteins to power living cells.

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Article Synopsis
  • A 100-million atom-scale model of a photosynthetic chromatophore vesicle from a purple bacterium was developed, demonstrating how energy conversion from sunlight leads to ATP production.
  • Molecular dynamics simulations showed how membrane complexes affect the vesicle's curvature and influence light absorption, while Brownian dynamics highlighted charge transport mechanisms based on environmental conditions.
  • The study indicates that adaptations for low-light conditions in the bacterium are products of optimizing structural integrity and energy conversion, with implications for understanding cellular aging and the potential for modeling entire living cells.
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The cellular process responsible for providing energy for most life on Earth, namely photosynthetic light-harvesting, requires the cooperation of hundreds of proteins across an organelle, involving length and time scales spanning several orders of magnitude over quantum and classical regimes. Simulation and visualization of this fundamental energy conversion process pose many unique methodological and computational challenges. We present, in two accompanying movies, light-harvesting in the photosynthetic apparatus found in purple bacteria, the so-called chromatophore.

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Hybrid structure fitting methods combine data from cryo-electron microscopy and X-ray crystallography with molecular dynamics simulations for the determination of all-atom structures of large biomolecular complexes. Evaluating the quality-of-fit obtained from hybrid fitting is computationally demanding, particularly in the context of a multiplicity of structural conformations that must be evaluated. Existing tools for quality-of-fit analysis and visualization have previously targeted small structures and are too slow to be used interactively for large biomolecular complexes of particular interest today such as viruses or for long molecular dynamics trajectories as they arise in protein folding.

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