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Institution

D. E. Shaw Research

CompanyNew York, New York, United States
About: D. E. Shaw Research is a company organization based out in New York, New York, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: G protein-coupled receptor & Massively parallel. The organization has 233 authors who have published 273 publications receiving 38359 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Glide approximates a complete systematic search of the conformational, orientational, and positional space of the docked ligand to find the best docked pose using a model energy function that combines empirical and force-field-based terms.
Abstract: Unlike other methods for docking ligands to the rigid 3D structure of a known protein receptor, Glide approximates a complete systematic search of the conformational, orientational, and positional space of the docked ligand In this search, an initial rough positioning and scoring phase that dramatically narrows the search space is followed by torsionally flexible energy optimization on an OPLS-AA nonbonded potential grid for a few hundred surviving candidate poses The very best candidates are further refined via a Monte Carlo sampling of pose conformation; in some cases, this is crucial to obtaining an accurate docked pose Selection of the best docked pose uses a model energy function that combines empirical and force-field-based terms Docking accuracy is assessed by redocking ligands from 282 cocrystallized PDB complexes starting from conformationally optimized ligand geometries that bear no memory of the correctly docked pose Errors in geometry for the top-ranked pose are less than 1 A in nearly ha

6,828 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jun 2010-Proteins
TL;DR: A new force field, which is termed Amber ff99SB‐ILDN, exhibits considerably better agreement with the NMR data and is validated against a large set of experimental NMR measurements that directly probe side‐chain conformations.
Abstract: Recent advances in hardware and software have enabled increasingly long molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of biomolecules, exposing certain limitations in the accuracy of the force fields used for such simulations and spurring efforts to refine these force fields. Recent modifications to the Amber and CHARMM protein force fields, for example, have improved the backbone torsion potentials, remedying deficiencies in earlier versions. Here, we further advance simulation accuracy by improving the amino acid side-chain torsion potentials of the Amber ff99SB force field. First, we used simulations of model alpha-helical systems to identify the four residue types whose rotamer distribution differed the most from expectations based on Protein Data Bank statistics. Second, we optimized the side-chain torsion potentials of these residues to match new, high-level quantum-mechanical calculations. Finally, we used microsecond-timescale MD simulations in explicit solvent to validate the resulting force field against a large set of experimental NMR measurements that directly probe side-chain conformations. The new force field, which we have termed Amber ff99SB-ILDN, exhibits considerably better agreement with the NMR data. Proteins 2010. © 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

4,590 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
11 Nov 2006
TL;DR: This work presents several new algorithms and implementation techniques that significantly accelerate parallel MD simulations compared with current state-of-the-art codes, including a novel parallel decomposition method and message-passing techniques that reduce communication requirements, as well as novel communication primitives that further reduce communication time.
Abstract: Although molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of biomolecular systems often run for days to months, many events of great scientific interest and pharmaceutical relevance occur on long time scales that remain beyond reach. We present several new algorithms and implementation techniques that significantly accelerate parallel MD simulations compared with current stateof- the-art codes. These include a novel parallel decomposition method and message-passing techniques that reduce communication requirements, as well as novel communication primitives that further reduce communication time. We have also developed numerical techniques that maintain high accuracy while using single precision computation in order to exploit processor-level vector instructions. These methods are embodied in a newly developed MD code called Desmond that achieves unprecedented simulation throughput and parallel scalability on commodity clusters. Our results suggest that Desmond?s parallel performance substantially surpasses that of any previously described code. For example, on a standard benchmark, Desmond?s performance on a conventional Opteron cluster with 2K processors slightly exceeded the reported performance of IBM?s Blue Gene/L machine with 32K processors running its Blue Matter MD code.

2,035 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
28 Oct 2011-Science
TL;DR: Results of atomic-level molecular dynamics simulations of 12 proteins reveal a set of common principles underlying the folding of 12 structurally diverse proteins that spontaneously and repeatedly fold to their experimentally determined native structures.
Abstract: An outstanding challenge in the field of molecular biology has been to understand the process by which proteins fold into their characteristic three-dimensional structures. Here, we report the results of atomic-level molecular dynamics simulations, over periods ranging between 100 μs and 1 ms, that reveal a set of common principles underlying the folding of 12 structurally diverse proteins. In simulations conducted with a single physics-based energy function, the proteins, representing all three major structural classes, spontaneously and repeatedly fold to their experimentally determined native structures. Early in the folding process, the protein backbone adopts a nativelike topology while certain secondary structure elements and a small number of nonlocal contacts form. In most cases, folding follows a single dominant route in which elements of the native structure appear in an order highly correlated with their propensity to form in the unfolded state.

1,673 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
15 Oct 2010-Science
TL;DR: Simulation of the folding of a WW domain showed a well-defined folding pathway and simulation of the dynamics of bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor showed interconversion between distinct conformational states.
Abstract: Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations are widely used to study protein motions at an atomic level of detail, but they have been limited to time scales shorter than those of many biologically critical conformational changes. We examined two fundamental processes in protein dynamics—protein folding and conformational change within the folded state—by means of extremely long all-atom MD simulations conducted on a special-purpose machine. Equilibrium simulations of a WW protein domain captured multiple folding and unfolding events that consistently follow a well-defined folding pathway; separate simulations of the protein’s constituent substructures shed light on possible determinants of this pathway. A 1-millisecond simulation of the folded protein BPTI reveals a small number of structurally distinct conformational states whose reversible interconversion is slower than local relaxations within those states by a factor of more than 1000.

1,650 citations


Authors

Showing all 236 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Richard A. Friesner9736752729
Burkhard Rost9332238606
Efthimios Kaxiras9250934924
David E. Shaw8829842616
Ron O. Dror7018827249
Adriaan P. IJzerman6239918706
Sheng Meng5732612307
Murcko Mark A5313014347
Kresten Lindorff-Larsen4716216222
Isaiah T. Arkin421055058
Stefano Piana406114065
Bronwyn MacInnis40848500
Kevin J. Bowers36997197
David W. Borhani34706068
Anton Arkhipov32724831
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20233
20222
202112
202011
20198
201816