Computational Studies on Biomolecular Diffusion and Electrostatics

<p> As human understandings of physics, chemistry and biology converge and the development of computers proceeds, computational chemistry or computational biophysics has become a substantial field of research. It serves to explore the fundamentals of life and also has extended applications in...

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Main Author: Wang, Nuo
Language:EN
Published: University of California, San Diego 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3731932
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spelling ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-37319322015-11-05T03:55:06Z Computational Studies on Biomolecular Diffusion and Electrostatics Wang, Nuo Physical chemistry|Biophysics <p> As human understandings of physics, chemistry and biology converge and the development of computers proceeds, computational chemistry or computational biophysics has become a substantial field of research. It serves to explore the fundamentals of life and also has extended applications in the field of medicine. Among the many aspects of computational chemistry, this Ph. D. work focuses on the numerical methods for studying diffusion and electrostatics of biomolecules at the nanoscale. Diffusion and electrostatics are two independent subjects in terms of their physics, but closely related in applications. In living cells, the mechanism of diffusion powers a ligand to move towards its binding target. And electrostatic forces between the ligand and the target or the ligand and the environment guide the direction of the diffusion, the correct binding orientation and, together with other molecular forces, ensure the stability of the bound complex. More abstractly, diffusion describes the stochastic manner biomolecules move on their energy landscape and electrostatic forces are a major contributor to the shape of the energy landscape. This Ph. D. work aims to acquire a good understanding of both biomolecular diffusion and electrostatics and how the two are used together in numerical calculations. Three projects are presented. The first project is a proof of concept of the bead-model approach to calculate the diffusion tensor. The second project is the benchmark for a new electrostatics method, the size-modified Poisson-Boltzmann equation. The third project is an application that combines diffusion and electrostatics to calculate the substrate channeling efficiency between the human thymidylate synthase and dihydrofolate reductase.</p> University of California, San Diego 2015-11-03 00:00:00.0 thesis http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3731932 EN
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic Physical chemistry|Biophysics
spellingShingle Physical chemistry|Biophysics
Wang, Nuo
Computational Studies on Biomolecular Diffusion and Electrostatics
description <p> As human understandings of physics, chemistry and biology converge and the development of computers proceeds, computational chemistry or computational biophysics has become a substantial field of research. It serves to explore the fundamentals of life and also has extended applications in the field of medicine. Among the many aspects of computational chemistry, this Ph. D. work focuses on the numerical methods for studying diffusion and electrostatics of biomolecules at the nanoscale. Diffusion and electrostatics are two independent subjects in terms of their physics, but closely related in applications. In living cells, the mechanism of diffusion powers a ligand to move towards its binding target. And electrostatic forces between the ligand and the target or the ligand and the environment guide the direction of the diffusion, the correct binding orientation and, together with other molecular forces, ensure the stability of the bound complex. More abstractly, diffusion describes the stochastic manner biomolecules move on their energy landscape and electrostatic forces are a major contributor to the shape of the energy landscape. This Ph. D. work aims to acquire a good understanding of both biomolecular diffusion and electrostatics and how the two are used together in numerical calculations. Three projects are presented. The first project is a proof of concept of the bead-model approach to calculate the diffusion tensor. The second project is the benchmark for a new electrostatics method, the size-modified Poisson-Boltzmann equation. The third project is an application that combines diffusion and electrostatics to calculate the substrate channeling efficiency between the human thymidylate synthase and dihydrofolate reductase.</p>
author Wang, Nuo
author_facet Wang, Nuo
author_sort Wang, Nuo
title Computational Studies on Biomolecular Diffusion and Electrostatics
title_short Computational Studies on Biomolecular Diffusion and Electrostatics
title_full Computational Studies on Biomolecular Diffusion and Electrostatics
title_fullStr Computational Studies on Biomolecular Diffusion and Electrostatics
title_full_unstemmed Computational Studies on Biomolecular Diffusion and Electrostatics
title_sort computational studies on biomolecular diffusion and electrostatics
publisher University of California, San Diego
publishDate 2015
url http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3731932
work_keys_str_mv AT wangnuo computationalstudiesonbiomoleculardiffusionandelectrostatics
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