Computer simulations of enzyme reaction mechanisms: Simulation of protein spectra

Beierlein F, Clark T (2004)


Publication Status: Published

Publication Type: Authored book

Publication year: 2004

Pages Range: 245-259

DOI: 10.1007/3-540-26657-7_22

Abstract

Enzymes play a key role in modern pharmaceutical research because they represent targets for the design of new drugs. In addition to the classical approach of inhibiting an enzyme by blocking its binding site with an inhibitor, the level of gene expression is now moving into the focus of interest. An important system for the investigation of mechanisms of transcriptional control is the Tet repressor/tet operator (TetR/tetO) system. We employ a combined classical/quantum mechanical approach to model the structure and the spectroscopic properties of the TetR-tetracycline complex. As our methods are based on semiempirical molecular orbital theory, we have also developed a parallel pseudodiagonalization technique for the major computational step in such calculations. The parallel pseudodiagonalizer gives acceptable performance for up to about eight processors.

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How to cite

APA:

Beierlein, F., & Clark, T. (2004). Computer simulations of enzyme reaction mechanisms: Simulation of protein spectra.

MLA:

Beierlein, Frank, and Timothy Clark. Computer simulations of enzyme reaction mechanisms: Simulation of protein spectra. 2004.

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