Description
Frontiers in Computational Chemistry: Volume 2
Computer Applications for Drug Design and Biomolecular Systems
Authors: Ul-Haq Zaheer, Madura Jeffry D.
Language: EnglishSubject for Frontiers in Computational Chemistry: Volume 2:
Keywords
Antibacterial Peptides; Photosensitizer Design; DNA Damage; Classification and Regression Based QSAR Models; Bis-alkylating Nitrogen Mustards; Prodrugs; Molecular Orbital Methods; Benzoxazin Derivative; Antibacterial Activity; Computational Biochemistry; deMon2k; Computational Simulations; Lipid Bilayer Based Molecular Systems; High Throughput Screenings
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Frontiers in Computational Chemistry, originally published by Bentham and now distributed by Elsevier, presents the latest research findings and methods in the diverse field of computational chemistry, focusing on molecular modeling techniques used in drug discovery and the drug development process. This includes computer-aided molecular design, drug discovery and development, lead generation, lead optimization, database management, computer and molecular graphics, and the development of new computational methods or efficient algorithms for the simulation of chemical phenomena including analyses of biological activity. In Volume 2, the authors continue the compendium with nine additional perspectives in the application of computational methods towards drug design. This volume covers an array of subjects from modern hardware advances that accelerate new antibacterial peptide identification, electronic structure methods that explain how singlet oxygen damages DNA, to QSAR model validation, the application of DFT and DFRT methods on understanding the action of nitrogen mustards, the design of novel prodrugs using molecular mechanics and molecular orbital methods, computational simulations of lipid bilayers, high throughput screening methods, and more.
2. Knowledge-Based Drug Repurposing: A Rational Approach Towards the Identification of Novel Medical Applications of Known Drugs (Carolina L. Bellera, Mauricio E. Di Ianni, María L. Sbaraglini, Eduardo A. Castro, Luis E. Bruno-Blanch and Alan Talevi)
3. Tuning the Solvation Term in the MM-PBSA/GBSA Binding Affinity Predictions (Irene Maffucci and Alessandro Contini)
4. Recent Advances in the Discovery and Development of Protein- Protein Interaction Modulators by Virtual Screening (Dik-Lung Ma, Li-Juan Liu, Sheng Lin, Modi Wang, Daniel Shiu-Hin Chan and Chung-Hang Leung)
5. Computational Design of Biological Systems: From Systems to Synthetic Biology (Milsee Mol and Shailza Singh)
6. Considering the Medium when Studying Biologically Active Molecules: Motivation, Options and Challenges (Liliana Mammino and Mwadham M. Kabanda)
7. A Novel Coarse-Grained Description of Protein Structure and Folding by UNRES Force Field and Discrete Nonlinear Schrödinger Equation (Adam Liwo, Antti Niemi, Xubiao Peng and Adam K. Sieradzan)
8. Computational Chemistry Strategies Tackling Function and Inhibition of Pharmaceutically Relevant Targets (Michele Cascella, Matteo Dal Peraro and Marco De Vivo)
professionals and students in experimental and computational chemistry, biochemistry, biophysics, and computer science studying drug design methods
Jeffry is the Lambert F. Minucci Endowed Chair in Engineering and Computational Sciences and Professor in the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry at Duquesne University. He earned a B.A. from Thiel College, a PhD in Physical Chemistry from Purdue University, and was a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Houston. His research interests include the development and application of biomolecular simulation software, the study of neurotransmitter transporters, the electronic structure of solid-state materials, and the thermoresponsive behavior of smart polymers. He has published 100+ peer-reviewed papers in physical chemistry and received over $6M in external research funding. He was a recipient of a Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar Award, was the chair of the ACS COMP Division, and is an ACS Fellow. Dr. Madura received the 2014 ACS Pittsburgh Local Section Award. He is a co-author to the textbook titled General Chemistry: Principles and Modern Applications as well as a co-author to a physical chemistry solutions manual. He received the Bayer School of Natural and Environmental S
- Brings together a wide range of research into a single collection to help researchers keep up with new methods
- Uniquely focuses on computational chemistry approaches that can accelerate drug design
- Makes a solid connection between experiment and computation, and the novel application of computational methods in the fields of biology, chemistry, biochemistry, physics, and biophysics