6533b829fe1ef96bd128a18e
RESEARCH PRODUCT
GEPOL: An improved description of molecular surfaces II. Computing the molecular area and volume
Juan Luis Pascual-ahuirEstanislao SillaIñaki Tuñónsubject
Surface (mathematics)Computational MathematicsLogarithmIntersectionLine (geometry)Scalar (physics)GeometryPoint (geometry)General ChemistryRepresentation (mathematics)Triangular tilingMathematicsdescription
The algorithm used by the program GEPOL for a finer description of molecular surface (for a fast calculation of molecular area and volume and for an efficient selection of sampling points) is presented in detail. Different types of surfaces such as van der Waals and Richard's molecular surfaces can be computed. As we described in the first article (J.L. Pascual-Ahuir and E. Silla, J. Comp. Chem., 11, 1047(1990)), GEPOL begins by building a set of spherical surfaces which fill the space which is not solvent accessible. In this second article, a triangular tessellation approach to select the parts of these spherical surfaces which form the molecular surface is described. By using a data coded generic pentakisdodecahedron, each spherical surface is divided in triangular tesserae. A simple method is used to eliminate all triangles found at the intersection volume of the spheres. The center coordinates and the surface of the remaining triangles are used in order to calculate the molecular area and volume and as starting point of the graphic representation of scalar and vector properties. We study the behavior of the method, presenting several examples of application. Special attention is given to the accuracy, spatial invariance and computer efficiency measured by CPU time. Some models of aligned spheres whose area and volume can be found exactly allow us to do a comparative study with a well-known method, analyzing their behavior in line with their respective graining parameters. A fragment of protein is used as an example of the application of the method for characterizing biomolecular surfaces. Aqueous solubility of organic compounds is studied as an example of the experimental property that depends on the molecular area obtaining a good correlation between the logarithm of the solubility and the area calculated using GEPOL.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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1991-11-01 | Journal of Computational Chemistry |