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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 119(1)2022 01 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34983849

RESUMEN

RAS is a signaling protein associated with the cell membrane that is mutated in up to 30% of human cancers. RAS signaling has been proposed to be regulated by dynamic heterogeneity of the cell membrane. Investigating such a mechanism requires near-atomistic detail at macroscopic temporal and spatial scales, which is not possible with conventional computational or experimental techniques. We demonstrate here a multiscale simulation infrastructure that uses machine learning to create a scale-bridging ensemble of over 100,000 simulations of active wild-type KRAS on a complex, asymmetric membrane. Initialized and validated with experimental data (including a new structure of active wild-type KRAS), these simulations represent a substantial advance in the ability to characterize RAS-membrane biology. We report distinctive patterns of local lipid composition that correlate with interfacially promiscuous RAS multimerization. These lipid fingerprints are coupled to RAS dynamics, predicted to influence effector binding, and therefore may be a mechanism for regulating cell signaling cascades.


Asunto(s)
Membrana Celular/enzimología , Lípidos/química , Aprendizaje Automático , Simulación de Dinámica Molecular , Multimerización de Proteína , Proteínas Proto-Oncogénicas p21(ras)/química , Transducción de Señal , Humanos
2.
J Chem Phys ; 153(4): 045103, 2020 Jul 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32752727

RESUMEN

We have implemented the Martini force field within Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory's molecular dynamics program, ddcMD. The program is extended to a heterogeneous programming model so that it can exploit graphics processing unit (GPU) accelerators. In addition to the Martini force field being ported to the GPU, the entire integration step, including thermostat, barostat, and constraint solver, is ported as well, which speeds up the simulations to 278-fold using one GPU vs one central processing unit (CPU) core. A benchmark study is performed with several test cases, comparing ddcMD and GROMACS Martini simulations. The average performance of ddcMD for a protein-lipid simulation system of 136k particles achieves 1.04 µs/day on one NVIDIA V100 GPU and aggregates 6.19 µs/day on one Summit node with six GPUs. The GPU implementation in ddcMD offloads all computations to the GPU and only requires one CPU core per simulation to manage the inputs and outputs, freeing up remaining CPU resources on the compute node for alternative tasks often required in complex simulation campaigns. The ddcMD code has been made open source and is available on GitHub at https://github.com/LLNL/ddcMD.

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