Overcoming resistance
To revive antibiotics and devise new drug designs, Georgia Tech researchers team up with Oak Ridge’s Titan supercomputer.
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ASCR Discovery carries original articles about computational science from the research portfolio of the Office of Advanced Scientific Computing Research in the Department of Energy Office of Science, plus links to DOE science highlights and other computational science-related content. ASCR-supported research includes projects at DOE national laboratories, at many public and private universities and collaborations with other agencies and institutions.
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To revive antibiotics and devise new drug designs, Georgia Tech researchers team up with Oak Ridge’s Titan supercomputer.
Rice University team computes protein conformations for paths around autoimmunity.
Biologically inspired architectures create opportunities and obstacles.
A supercomputer has modeled the HIV capsid, opening drug possibilities.
A European E. coli outbreak tests a DOE cloud computing testbed.
A PNNL team’s method ratchets up accuracy to identify peptides.
Simulating biology from the subcellular to the whole human will require a big-picture view made possible only through exascale computing.
Using genetic engineering and computer modeling, researchers have built a genetic clock, in which bacteria use chemical signals to generate synchronized waves of activity.
Proteins can be unpredictable, kinking into shapes that help to determine these biological workhorses’ functions – or dysfunctions. A University of Washington biologist is using high-performance computers to untangle proteins.
Computer models get to the heart of arrhythmia causes.