Lecturer
Mathematics
Non-linearity and Complexity Research Group (NCRG)
Phone number
+44 (0)121 204 3533
Email
D.Nerukh@aston.ac.uk
Room number
Main Building 314B
For my
CV and
publications see my
Personal web page
Research areas
Kinetics of ligand binding. Obtaining the rates of binding
of small molecules to proteins from realistic full-atom molecular dynamics
simulations. Developing approaches for calculating correct bio-molecular
transformation rates, taking into account non-Markvoian behaviour of states.
Self-organising molecular systems. Adapting and evolving
chemical systems. Applications to self-organising materials.
Hybrid hydrodynamics – molecular dynamics simulation.
Modelling bio-molecular systems where fully atomistic and purely hydrodynamic
representations coexist and smoothly transform into each other at different
spatial locations.
Complexity of dynamical systems. Quantitative approaches to
computing the complexity of physical systems. Informational contents of
classical dynamics of molecular systems. Molecules as non-linear dynamical
systems.
Protein folding. Molecular Dynamics simulation of protein
folding. Complexity of the dynamics of folding. “Controlled MD” – a correct
methods for accelerated folding simulations.
Bohmian quantum dynamics. Application of Bohmian mechanics
to realistic molecular systems. Developing methods for effective propagation of
Bohmian quantum trajectories for multidimensional systems.
Newly funded research project:
Using next generation
computers and algorithms for modelling the dynamics of large biomolecular
systems
We are looking for candidates for two positions:
- PhD student (details)
- Research Associate
Background
Main challenges in simulation of complex molecular
processes such as protein folding or ligand-protein binding is modelling of
water: behaving as a structureless continuum in the bulk it needs to be
represented at the atomistic level in a relatively small ‘core’ area of the
system. The simulation of atomistic (explicit) water takes up to 90% of
computing resources and makes the calculation prohibitively expensive. It is
intuitively clear that the atomistic details are unnecessary in the areas
distant from the biomolecule. However, in the vicinity of the biomolecule some
water molecules are known to contribute to the biomolecular process in a very
non-trivial way and their explicit modelling is decisively important. The most natural representation of water in
the bulk is provided by continuum hydrodynamics (CH). Computer modelling in both representations,
MD and CH, is well developed, but separated by a gap in the time and space
scales accessible to simulations. Closing this gap is only possible if two
directions are developed coherently: 1) new generation hardware, currently
approaching the CH scales in MD simulations and 2) theory and software correctly
joining the MD and CH representations.
This underlines the objectives of our project:
1) to develop a new efficient theoretical and
computational framework for hybrid MD-CH simulation of bio-chemically important
processes at realistic time and space scales;
2) to implement and test this framework in the world
fastest supercomputing facility;
3) to conduct large scale simulations of trimethoprim
(TMP) binding to dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) and compare the predicted
kinetic properties, the binding rate, with measured experimental values.
Methodology
Attempts of incorporating a group of classical atoms
into a continuum solvent (implicit solvent) are known for a long time. However, the most consistent approach describing
a structured continuum, the hydrodynamics, is a direction that becomes active
only very recently. Conceptually, modelling
the MD particles in the ‘transfer’ region where the MD and CH domains overlap (the
‘runaway’ MD particles) remains the most pressing problem of essentially all approaches
of this type.
We propose a fundamentally
new hybrid model that aims at solving this problem. It is based on a generalised description of
the MD and CH components within the flux coupling approach. The proposed framework will ensure that the
transition between the CH and MD representations is smooth and characterised by
(i) the absence of numerical “fixes”
such as artificial repulsive barriers between the atomistic and continuum parts
or adding new particles, (ii) unified treatment of the solution parts using the
same equations throughout the system’s volume, (iii) the full control by a
single empirical function that can be of arbitrary
form both in space and time. The new method will lead to a large reduction
of the simulation cost due to a large truncation of the MD domain, achieved without loosing either the detailed
atomistic simulation in the MD zone or the macroscopic conservation laws for
both mass and momentum.
The project is a well balanced combination of state of
the art computer hardware development, advanced numerical modelling (the triad
of molecular dynamics, continuum fluid mechanics, and numerical methods) and cutting
edge investigation of biomedically important molecular system.
Consortium
The Consortium consists of
five teams.
1.
Prof.
Makoto Taiji group, Yokohama RIKEN Institute,
Japan, will
coordinate the
project. The team is the author of
MDGRAPE computer, a petascale special purpose computer for protein molecular
dynamics simulations, that has been awarded three Gordon Bell prizes proving
the best in the world. Many years of
experience in high performance biomolecular (in particular, drug design)
simulations [M Harada et al,
Nature
Genetics 41(3), 289 (2009)] will
serve as a solid foundation for the project.
2. Dr Dmitry Nerukh group, in Aston University,
UK will provide the molecular dynamics part of the theoretical
framework. The group’s expertise in
complex dynamics of molecular systems using modern mathematical approaches and
non-trivial numerical implementations [D Nerukh, Vladimir Ryabov, and Makoto
Taiji,
Physica A,
388(22), 4719 (2009)] will complement
the hydrodynamics part of the theoretical work.
Also, the physical chemistry expertise of the team will be used to
perform the simulations of the DHFR-TMP system.
3.
Prof. Vasily Goloviznin group, Moscow Institute of Nuclear Safety,
Russia will bring in the world leading expertise
in computational mathematics that is essential for implementing high resolution
numerical algorithms that remain robust for solving small scale hydrodynamics
equations with coarse grids. This group has had a long term collaboration on
high resolution methods for computational fluid dynamics with
4.
Dr
Sergey Karabasov group, Cambridge University,
UK. The group will lead the continuum hydrodynamic development of
the theory and its numerical framework implementation. Because of the fluctuating
hydrodynamics involved, the Eulerian modelling will be based on the novel
high-resolution advection method [Karabasov and Goloviznin,
J. Comput. Phys.,
228, 7426 (2009)].
5. Prof.
Masahiro Ueda group, Osaka University, will bring the world leading expertise
in single molecular imaging experimental work that will be used to measure the
kinetics of the simulated system and compare the results.