Los Alamos National 
LaboratoryGo to 
the Lab's 
home pageSearch for people 
in the 
Lab's directorySearch the Laboratory's Web site
 News and Public Affairs  News Releases
Site MapNewsJobsMapsLibrarySearch
   News Releases
 

by Subject
by Organization
by Year

  Publications
  Press Kit
  Other News Sources
  Contacts
     

Protein folding physics modeled at the atomic level

Contact: Kevin Roark, knroark@lanl.gov, (505) 665-0582 (02-116)


    

Recent News

* Los Alamos scientist named Asian American Engineer of the Year

* Los Alamos scientist featured in NASA science update

* Los Alamos muon detector could thwart nuclear smugglers

* Wojciech H. Zurek named Phi Beta Kappa visiting scholar

* Four Los Alamos physicists honored by American Physical Society

* Los Alamos National Laboratory organizations earn seven out of 13 NNSA Pollution Prevention awards

* Carter Hydrick returns to the Bradbury Science Museum Feb. 15

* Laboratory supports summer science program

* New NASA IBEX mission to carry Los Alamos instrument

* Beason takes top threat reduction post at Los Alamos

LOS ALAMOS, N.M., Oct. 14, 2002 -- Researchers at Los Alamos National Laboratory and the University of California, San Diego, have created the first computer simulation of full-system protein folding thermodynamics at the atomic-level. Understanding the basic physics of protein folding could solve one of the grand mysteries of computational biology.

Proteins are the basic building blocks of life and protein folding, the process by which proteins reconfigure themselves — the actions that result in structural change — are the foundation of cellular growth and the health of a biological system. When proteins incorrectly fold the malfunction can give rise to a variety of diseases. The fact that proteins fold has been known since the 1960s, but an understanding of the chemical and physical properties of folding continues to elude scientists.

Understanding how proteins undergo the folding process has largely been studied from a biologist’s point of view, probing actual proteins and studying them with high-powered microscopy techniques. Now, Los Alamos theoretical biophysicist Angel Garcia, along with colleague Jose N. Onuchic of UC San Diego, have created a computer model of protein folding that focuses on the physics of the protein folding, specifically looking at the temperature changes that occur in the process.

Garcia will present his findings at 4:45 p.m. today, at the Rocky Mountain regional meeting of the American Chemical Society at the Hyatt Regency Hotel, 330 Tijeras N.W., Albuquerque.

Protein complexes can be very large molecules containing millions of atoms, and protein folding is chemically and physically complex. Folding occurs very rapidly as well, with small protein molecules folding in millionths of seconds.

“We have chosen to first look at a comparatively simple protein in water system consisting of about 18,000 atoms, called a 3-heilx bundle, that folds in a fairly simple way and relatively slowly, in about 10 microseconds,” said Garcia. “Our calculation is based on Onuchic’s ‘funneling theory’ of protein folding that looks at the ‘energy landscape’ of folding and finds that as the protein gets closer and closer to it’s folded state it’s energy gets lower and lower.”

Garcia implemented an algorithm that relies on exhaustive sampling of protein configurations and utilizes massively parallel computing combined with molecular dynamics and a random-sampling Monte Carlo simulation of the thermodynamics. The result is a computer model of the basic physical properties in a simple system that, if correct, should be applicable to even the most complex proteins. “In principle,” said Garcia, “it should work for all proteins.”

The protein folding problem is complex computationally because a protein can adopt many shapes and configurations that grow exponentially based on the number of amino acids in a chain, called a polypeptide. A typical protein has between 60 and 150 amino acids. A typical amino acid, like glutamine, consists of 20 carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen atoms.

Garcia’s 18,000-atom computation was completed on 82 parallel processors over about a six-month time frame, translating to more than 34 years of Central Processing Unit time.

Garcia plans to continue working on protein folding physics, creating more complex models that mimic the physics beyond the thermodynamic, with the eventual goal of better understanding the folding process for even the most complex protein structures.

Los Alamos National Laboratory is operated by the University of California for the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) of the U.S. Department of Energy and works in partnership with NNSA's Sandia and Lawrence Livermore national laboratories to support NNSA in its mission.

Los Alamos enhances global security by ensuring the safety and reliability of the U.S. nuclear stockpile, developing technologies to reduce threats from weapons of mass destruction, and solving problems related to energy, environment, infrastructure, health and national security concerns.



Additional news releases related to Computing/Information Science

Additional news releases from the Theoretical (T) Division

       
       
 Los Alamos National Laboratory
Operated by the Los Alamos National Security, LLC for the U.S. Department of Energy's
NNSA   
Inside
| © Copyright 2007-8 Los Alamos National Security, LLC All rights reserved | Disclaimer/Privacy

Last Modified: Monday, 28-Feb-2005 12:38:59 MST
www-news@lanl.gov