Pi in the sky
A Pi Day celebration of the pi-dependent algorithm and the computational science pioneer who transformed climate modeling.
Memory boost
A PNNL-industry collaboration aims to connect memory across processors, supercharging artificial intelligence applications on high-performance computers.
Sustainable cities
Oak Ridge researchers harness Argonne’s Theta supercomputer to build energy-efficiency models for all U.S. buildings.
Shrinking big physics
An international team that wants to build small high-energy physics machines tries out its designs on Oak Ridge’s Frontier exascale computer.
Science Highlights
Can proteins bind based on their shapes?
Researchers using the Summit supercomputer find some answers to a basic biological question.
A complex cocktail of chemical reactions mediates protein binding. To test whether proteins’ shapes alone can help them bind to one another, researchers working with Oak Ridge National Laboratory’s Summit supercomputer modeled so-called lock-and-key interactions – in which protein molecules chemically fit precisely enough to bind. The team tested 46 protein pairs known to bind. Next, the team modeled those protein pairs’ assembly on Summit. Out of the 46 pairs tested, six assembled based on their complementary shapes more than 50 percent of the time. The work has implications in drug screening and biomaterials design.
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