Defining, Computing, and Visualizing Molecular Interfaces
Title | Defining, Computing, and Visualizing Molecular Interfaces |
Publication Type | Conference Papers |
Year of Publication | 1995 |
Authors | Varshney A, Brooks Jr FP, Manocha D, Wright WV, Richardson DC |
Conference Name | Proceedings of the 6th conference on Visualization '95 |
Date Published | 1995/// |
Publisher | IEEE Computer Society |
Conference Location | Washington, DC, USA |
ISBN Number | 0-8186-7187-4 |
Keywords | Computational Biochemistry Algorithms Molecular Graphics, Connolly Surfaces, Molecular Interfaces, Molecular Surfaces, Protein-Protein Recognition |
Abstract | A parallel, analytic approach for defining and computing the inter- and intra-molecular interfaces in three dimensions is described. The "molecular interface surfaces" are derived from approximations to the power-diagrams over the participating molecular units. For a given molecular interface our approach can generate a family of interface surfaces parametrized by alpha and beta, where alpha is the radius of the solvent molecule (also known as the probe-radius) and beta is the interface radius that defines the size of the molecular interface. Molecular interface surfaces provide biochemists with a powerful tool to study surface complementarity and to efficiently characterize the interactions during a protein-substrate docking. The complexity of our algorithm for molecular environments is O(n k \log^2{k}), where n is the number of atoms in the participating molecular units and k is the average number of neighboring atoms -- a constant, given alpha and beta. |
URL | http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=832271.833834 |