A Computational Kinematics and Evolutionary Approach to Model Molecular Flexibility for Bionanotechnology

Modeling molecular structures is critical for understanding the principles that govern the behavior of molecules and for facilitating the exploration of potential pharmaceutical drugs and nanoscale designs. Biological molecules are flexible bodies that can adopt many different shapes (or conformatio...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Brintaki, Athina N
Format: Others
Published: Scholar Commons 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/1579
https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2578&context=etd
id ndltd-USF-oai-scholarcommons.usf.edu-etd-2578
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-USF-oai-scholarcommons.usf.edu-etd-25782019-12-05T16:07:38Z A Computational Kinematics and Evolutionary Approach to Model Molecular Flexibility for Bionanotechnology Brintaki, Athina N Modeling molecular structures is critical for understanding the principles that govern the behavior of molecules and for facilitating the exploration of potential pharmaceutical drugs and nanoscale designs. Biological molecules are flexible bodies that can adopt many different shapes (or conformations) until they reach a stable molecular state that is usually described by the minimum internal energy. A major challenge in modeling flexible molecules is the exponential explosion in computational complexity as the molecular size increases and many degrees of freedom are considered to represent the molecules' flexibility. This research work proposes a novel generic computational geometric approach called enhanced BioGeoFilter (g.eBGF) that geometrically interprets inter-atomic interactions to impose geometric constraints during molecular conformational search to reduce the time for identifying chemically-feasible conformations. Two new methods called Kinematics-Based Differential Evolution (kDE) and Biological Differential Evolution (BioDE) are also introduced to direct the molecular conformational search towards low energy (stable) conformations. The proposed kDE method kinematically describes a molecule's deformation mechanism while it uses differential evolution to minimize the inta-molecular energy. On the other hand, the proposed BioDE utilizes our developed g.eBGF data structure as a surrogate approximation model to reduce the number of exact evaluations and to speed the molecular conformational search. This research work will be extremely useful in enabling the modeling of flexible molecules and in facilitating the exploration of nanoscale designs through the virtual assembly of molecules. Our research work can also be used in areas such as molecular docking, protein folding, and nanoscale computer-aided design where rapid collision detection scheme for highly deformable objects is essential. 2009-11-03T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/1579 https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2578&context=etd default Graduate Theses and Dissertations Scholar Commons collision detection molecular conformational search flexible molecules molecular stability computational geometry differential evolution American Studies Arts and Humanities
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic collision detection
molecular conformational search
flexible molecules
molecular stability
computational geometry
differential evolution
American Studies
Arts and Humanities
spellingShingle collision detection
molecular conformational search
flexible molecules
molecular stability
computational geometry
differential evolution
American Studies
Arts and Humanities
Brintaki, Athina N
A Computational Kinematics and Evolutionary Approach to Model Molecular Flexibility for Bionanotechnology
description Modeling molecular structures is critical for understanding the principles that govern the behavior of molecules and for facilitating the exploration of potential pharmaceutical drugs and nanoscale designs. Biological molecules are flexible bodies that can adopt many different shapes (or conformations) until they reach a stable molecular state that is usually described by the minimum internal energy. A major challenge in modeling flexible molecules is the exponential explosion in computational complexity as the molecular size increases and many degrees of freedom are considered to represent the molecules' flexibility. This research work proposes a novel generic computational geometric approach called enhanced BioGeoFilter (g.eBGF) that geometrically interprets inter-atomic interactions to impose geometric constraints during molecular conformational search to reduce the time for identifying chemically-feasible conformations. Two new methods called Kinematics-Based Differential Evolution (kDE) and Biological Differential Evolution (BioDE) are also introduced to direct the molecular conformational search towards low energy (stable) conformations. The proposed kDE method kinematically describes a molecule's deformation mechanism while it uses differential evolution to minimize the inta-molecular energy. On the other hand, the proposed BioDE utilizes our developed g.eBGF data structure as a surrogate approximation model to reduce the number of exact evaluations and to speed the molecular conformational search. This research work will be extremely useful in enabling the modeling of flexible molecules and in facilitating the exploration of nanoscale designs through the virtual assembly of molecules. Our research work can also be used in areas such as molecular docking, protein folding, and nanoscale computer-aided design where rapid collision detection scheme for highly deformable objects is essential.
author Brintaki, Athina N
author_facet Brintaki, Athina N
author_sort Brintaki, Athina N
title A Computational Kinematics and Evolutionary Approach to Model Molecular Flexibility for Bionanotechnology
title_short A Computational Kinematics and Evolutionary Approach to Model Molecular Flexibility for Bionanotechnology
title_full A Computational Kinematics and Evolutionary Approach to Model Molecular Flexibility for Bionanotechnology
title_fullStr A Computational Kinematics and Evolutionary Approach to Model Molecular Flexibility for Bionanotechnology
title_full_unstemmed A Computational Kinematics and Evolutionary Approach to Model Molecular Flexibility for Bionanotechnology
title_sort computational kinematics and evolutionary approach to model molecular flexibility for bionanotechnology
publisher Scholar Commons
publishDate 2009
url https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/1579
https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2578&context=etd
work_keys_str_mv AT brintakiathinan acomputationalkinematicsandevolutionaryapproachtomodelmolecularflexibilityforbionanotechnology
AT brintakiathinan computationalkinematicsandevolutionaryapproachtomodelmolecularflexibilityforbionanotechnology
_version_ 1719301763124690944