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IMA Annual Program Year Workshop

Solvation

December 8-12, 2008
Organizers:
Michael J. Holst Mathematics, University of California, San Diego
Benedetta Mennucci Chemistry, University of Pisa
B. Montgomery Pettitt Chemistry, University of Houston
L. Ridgway Scott Computer Science/Mathematics, University of Chicago

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Tutorial: Theories of Solvation Within Quantum Chemistry, December 7, 2008

Description:

Physical theories of solvation and their approximate numerical solution have advanced significantly in recent years. Solvation properties of biomolecules are critical to their biological activity. The extent to which water molecules play a structural role in biomolecules is known to be extensive, yet not fully explored. Moreover, the desolvation of biomolecules is required for ligand association, as must occur in signaling, formation of complexes, drug binding and catalysis. Many current, commonly used tools are either insufficiently accurate, or too expensive to be used routinely, or both. A central interest is the development of new theoretical techniques with both improved accuracy and cost efficiency. A number of different physical formulations of solvation are currently under consideration in the literature. These include molecular simulations, density functionals, integral equations, and continuum electrostatics. Each has its own profile in terms of biophysical rigor and computational efficiency.

This workshop will highlight recent advances in both the derivation of physical formulations as well as in the formulation of approximate solutions to the various models. Some methods deal directly with particle trajectories while others involve direct calculations of the probability distributions. Often the results of trajectories are put into the form of distribution functions. Most mechanical averages and fluctuations are easily extracted from moment integrals over such distributions and so it is natural that they become the central objects for comparison.

We will consider recent contributions from fields such as Finite Difference Poisson Boltzmann, Molecular Integral Equations, Density Function Theories and Computer Simulations, all in both classical and quantum mechanical formulations. The understanding of the underlying physical principles will be addressed as well. The dielectric effect of solvents is key to their solvation activity, and this effect is strongly modulated by combinations of hydrophobic and hydrophilic entities in many biological and other systems. The role of emergence in the behavior of solvent systems is also of critical importance. Mathematical methods emphasizing multi-resolution, and multi-grid, methods are in common use but progress is not uniform in adopting techniques from the recent literature. A key objective will be the use of more efficient mathematical methods applied to the most robust physical formulations of solvation.

Schedule
Monday | Tuesday | Wednesday | Thursday | Friday
  Monday, December 8
Session (Protein Solvation)
Chair: Benedetta Mennucci (Università di Pisa)
8:15am-9:00am Registration and coffee   EE/CS 3-176
9:00am-9:20am Welcome to the IMA Fadil Santosa (University of Minnesota) EE/CS 3-180
9:20am-10:00am Solvation and the energetics of protein folding Robert L. Baldwin (Stanford University) EE/CS 3-180
10:00am-10:40am Intricate role of water molecules in protein dynamics Donald Hamelberg (Georgia State University) EE/CS 3-180
10:40am-11:10am Coffee   EE/CS 3-176
11:10am-11:50am Solubility profiles of amyloidogenic molecular structures. Theory and experiment Florin Despa (University of California, Davis) EE/CS 3-180
11:50am-12:30pm Probing the prion hydration by Molecular dynamics simulations: from native via misfolded to amyloid conformations Alfonso De Simone (University of Cambridge) EE/CS 3-180
12:30pm-2:30pm Lunch    
2:30pm-3:10pm Second chances L. Ridgway Scott (University of Chicago) EE/CS 3-180
3:10pm-3:25pm Group photo    
3:30pm-5:30pm Poster Session and Reception
Poster submissions welcome from all participants
Lind Hall 400
Solvation and the energetics of protein folding (poster) Robert L. Baldwin (Stanford University)
Competition of steric repulsion and electrostatic attraction determines the selectivity of calcium channels Dezső Boda (University of Pannonia)
On the Vibrational effective polarizabilities calculation from continuum solvation models Roberto Cammi (Università di Parma, e-mail: roberto.cammi@unipr.it)
Modeling environment effects on electronic energy transfer Carles Curutchet (University of Toronto)
Aurora Muñoz (Università di Pisa)
An adaptive fast multipole algorithm for electrostatic interactions in biomolecular system Jingfang Huang (University of North Carolina)
Optimization of transition pathways using interpolated parameters from swarms of trajectories Dmitry A. Kondrashov (University of Wisconsin)
Slip boundary conditions in nanofluidics from the molecular theory of solvation Andriy Kovalenko (National Institute for Nanotechnology)
3D molecular theory of solvation in multiscale modeling of chemical nanostructures in solution Andriy Kovalenko (National Institute for Nanotechnology)
Novel stochastic methods in biochemical electrostatics Michael Mascagni (Florida State University)
Cross sections and photoelectron angular distributions in photodetachment from negative ions using EOM-CCSD Dyson orbitals C. Melania Oana (University of Southern California)
Macroscopic pattern formation of liquid crystal in kappa-carrageenan gel Isamu Onishi (Hiroshima University)
Optimization of a hybrid implicit/explicit solvation model Jason A. Wagoner (Stanford University)
  Tuesday, December 9
Session (QM/MM & Cont)
Morning Chair: B. Montgomery Pettitt (University of Houston)
Afternoon Chair: Jingfang Huang (University of North Carolina)
8:30am-9:00am Coffee   EE/CS 3-176
9:00am-9:40am QM or MM? Development of a next-generation force field for chemical and biomolecular simulations Jiali Gao (University of Minnesota) EE/CS 3-180
9:40am-10:20am An overview of the non linearity in Quantum Chemical continuum solvation models Roberto Cammi (Università di Parma, e-mail: roberto.cammi@unipr.it) EE/CS 3-180
10:20am-10:50am Coffee   EE/CS 3-176
10:50am-11:30am Quantum chemical modelling of molecules at dielectric surfaces and interfaces Luca Frediani (University of Tromsø) EE/CS 3-180
11:30am-2:20pm Lunch    
2:20pm-3:00pm Biomolecular solvation: from molecular to continuum models Nathan A. Baker (Washington University School of Medicine) EE/CS 3-180
3:00pm-3:40pm Coupling the level-set method with variational implicit-solvent models for molecular solvation Bo Li (University of California, San Diego) EE/CS 3-180
3:40pm-4:10pm Coffee   EE/CS 3-176
4:10pm-5:00pm Second chances Mark E. Tuckerman (New York University) EE/CS 3-180
  Wednesday, December 10
Morning session (Sim-MD)
Chair: Nina Singhal Hinrichs (University of Chicago)

Afternoon session: TBA

8:30am-9:00am Coffee   EE/CS 3-176
9:00am-9:40am Hydration from organic molecules to protein-ligand complexes William L. Jorgensen (Yale University) EE/CS 3-180
9:40am-10:20am Solvation and hydration at different scales Bernard R. Brooks (National Institutes of Health) EE/CS 3-180
10:20am-10:50am Coffee   EE/CS 3-176
10:50am-11:30am Calculation of small molecule solvation free energy by molecular dynamics and Monte Carlo simulations. Yuqing Deng (Zymeworks Inc.) EE/CS 3-180
11:30am-12:10pm Classical molecular dynamics simulations of the liquid water-gold interface Stefano Corni (Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche (CNR)) EE/CS 3-180
12:10pm-2:20pm Lunch    
2:20pm-3:00pm First-principles simulation of electrochemical systems Eric Cances (CERMICS) EE/CS 3-180
3:00pm-3:40pm Fast algorithms for integral equations Carl Timothy Kelley (North Carolina State University) EE/CS 3-180
3:40pm-4:10pm Coffee   EE/CS 3-176
4:10pm-5:00pm Second chances Michael J. Holst (University of California, San Diego) EE/CS 3-180
  Thursday, December 11
Session (Poisson-Boltzmann (PB))
Morning Chair: Robert D. Skeel (Purdue University)
Afternoon Chair: Stephen Bond (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign)
8:30am-9:00am Coffee   EE/CS 3-176
9:00am-9:40am A fast N-body solver for the Poisson(-Boltzmann) equation Robert D. Skeel (Purdue University) EE/CS 3-180
9:40am-10:20am The membrane potential and its representation in computer simulations Benoit Roux (University of Chicago) EE/CS 3-180
10:20am-10:50am Coffee   EE/CS 3-176
10:50am-11:30am Self-organized models of selectivity in Ca and Na channels Robert S. Eisenberg (Rush University Medical Center) EE/CS 3-180
11:30am-12:10pm Molecular recognition in life phenomena probed with the statistical mechanics of liquids Fumio Hirata (National Institutes of Natural Sciences) EE/CS 3-180
12:10pm-2:20pm Lunch    
2:20pm-3:00pm Estimating electrostatic contributions to solvation via boundary-integral equation theory Jaydeep P. Bardhan (Argonne National Laboratory) EE/CS 3-180
3:00pm-3:40pm TBA Marcia O. Fenley (Florida State University) EE/CS 3-180
3:40pm-4:10pm Coffee   EE/CS 3-176
4:10pm-5:00pm Second chances Matthew Gregg Knepley (Argonne National Laboratory) EE/CS 3-180
6:30pm-8:00pm Workshop dinner at Pagoda   Pagoda Restaurant
1417 4th St. SE
Minneapolis, MN
612-378-4710 
  Friday, December 12
Session (Statistics)
Chair: Carlos J. Garcia-Cervera (University of California, Santa Barbara)
8:30am-9:40am Coffee   EE/CS 3-176
9:40am-10:20am Classical density functional theory approach to solvation in polar solvents Daniel Jean Borgis (École Normale Supérieure) EE/CS 3-180
10:20am-10:50am Coffee   EE/CS 3-176
10:50am-11:30am Dimerization of formamide Modesto Orozco (Institute for Research in Biomedicine (IRB Barcelona)) EE/CS 3-180
11:30am-12:00pm Second chances   EE/CS 3-180
12:00pm-12:10pm Closure   EE/CS 3-180

LIST OF CONFIRMED PARTICIPANTS

NameDepartmentAffiliation
Nathan A. BakerDepartment of Biochemistry and Molecular Biophysics Washington University School of Medicine
Robert L. BaldwinBiochemistry Department Stanford University
Jaydeep P. BardhanMathematics and Computer Science Division Argonne National Laboratory
Dezső BodaDepartment of Physical Chemistry University of Pannonia
Stephen BondDepartment of Computer Science University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Daniel Jean BorgisDépartement de Chimie École Normale Supérieure
Bernard R. BrooksLaboratory of Computational Biology, NHLBI National Institutes of Health
Peter BruneDepartment of Computer Science University of Chicago
Maria-Carme T. CaldererSchool of Mathematics University of Minnesota
Hannah CallenderInstitute for Mathematics and its Applications University of Minnesota
Roberto CammiFacoltà di Scienze Università di Parma, e-mail: roberto.cammi@unipr.it
Eric CancesENPC CERMICS
Chiara CappelliDipartimento di Chimica e Chimica Industriale Università di Pisa
Alessandro CembranDepartment of Chemistry University of Minnesota
Xianjin ChenInstitute for Mathematics and its Applications University of Minnesota
Daniel M. ChipmanRadiation Laboratory University of Notre Dame
Stefano CorniTheoretical and Computational Nanoscience Group Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche (CNR)
Ludovica Cecilia Cotta-RamusinoInstitute for Mathematics and its Applications University of Minnesota
Carles CurutchetDepartment of Chemistry University of Toronto
Allison CuttlerDepartment of Mathematics University of California, San Diego
Ismaila DaboCERMICS Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Yuqing Deng Zymeworks Inc.
Alfonso De SimoneDepartment of Chemistry University of Cambridge
Florin DespaDepartment of Pharmacology University of California, Davis
Olivier DuboisInstitute for Mathematics and its Applications University of Minnesota
Robert S. EisenbergDepartment of Molecular Biophysics and Physiology Rush University Medical Center
Jorge EstevezPhysics University of Minnesota
Marcia O. FenleyDepartment of Physics Florida State University
Daniel FlathDepartment of Mathematics and Computer Science Macalester College
James FonsecaDepartment of Molecular Biophysics and Physiology Rush University Medical Center
Christopher FraserDepartment of Computer Science University of Chicago
Luca FredianiDepartment of Chemistry University of Tromsø
Jiali GaoDepartment of Chemistry University of Minnesota
Weiguo GaoSchool of Mathematical Sciences Fudan University
Carlos J. Garcia-CerveraDepartment of Mathematics University of California, Santa Barbara
Janhavi GiriMolecular Biophysics and Physiology Department Rush University Medical Center
Jay GopalakrishnanDepartment of Mathematics University of Florida
Donald HamelbergDepartment of Chemistry Georgia State University
Jaebeom HanDepartment of Chemistry University of Minnesota
Timothy F. Havel Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Mark S. HermanInstitute for Mathematics and its Applications University of Minnesota
Masahiro HigashiDepartment of Chemistry University of Minnesota
Peter HinowInstitute for Mathematics and its Applications University of Minnesota
Nina Singhal HinrichsDepartments of Computer Science and Statistics University of Chicago
Fumio HirataInstitute for Molecular Science National Institutes of Natural Sciences
Michael J. HolstDepartment of Mathematics University of California, San Diego
Jingfang HuangDepartment of Mathematics University of North Carolina
Yunkyong HyonInstitute for Mathematics and its Applications University of Minnesota
Mark IwenInstitute for Mathematics and its Applications University of Minnesota
Alexander IzzoDepartment of Mathematics and Statistics Bowling Green State University
Lasse JensenDepartment of Chemistry Pennsylvania State University
Srividhya JeyaramanInstitute for Mathematics and its Applications University of Minnesota
Lijian JiangInstitute for Mathematics and its Applications University of Minnesota
William L. JorgensenDepartment of Chemistry Yale University
Hiqmet KamberajCenter for Drug Design University of Minnesota
Carl Timothy KelleyDepartment of Mathematics North Carolina State University
Yongho KimChemistry Department University of Minnesota
Matthew Gregg KnepleyMathematics and Computer Science Division Argonne National Laboratory
Dmitry A. KondrashovDepartment of Biological Sciences University of Chicago
Andriy Kovalenko National Institute for Nanotechnology
Anna KrylovDepartment of Chemistry University of Southern California
Claude Le BrisEcole Nationale des Ponts et Chaussées (ENPC) CERMICS
Chiun-Chang LeeDepartment of Mathematics National Taiwan University
Hijin LeeMathematics Department Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST)
Bo LiDepartment of Mathematics University of California, San Diego
Tong LiDepartment of Mathematics University of Iowa
Yongfeng LiInstitute for Mathematics and its Applications University of Minnesota
Pinsker Lin University of Minnesota
Tai-Chia LinDepartment of Mathematics National Taiwan University
Chun LiuInstitute for Mathematics and its Applications University of Minnesota
Mitchell LuskinSchool of Mathematics University of Minnesota
Vasileios MaroulasInstitute for Mathematics and its Applications University of Minnesota
Marcelo MaruchoDepartment of Biochemistry and Molecular Biophysics Washington University School of Medicine
Michael MascagniDepartment of Computer Science and Computational Science Florida State University
Benedetta MennucciDepartment of Chemistry Università di Pisa
Aurora MuñozChimica e Chimica Industriale Università di Pisa
C. Melania OanaDepartment of Chemistry University of Southern California
Isamu OnishiDepartment of Mathematical and Life Sciences Hiroshima University
Modesto Orozco Institute for Research in Biomedicine (IRB Barcelona)
B. Montgomery PettittDepartment of Chemistry University of Houston
Benoit RouxDepartment of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology University of Chicago
Fadil SantosaInstitute for Mathematics and its Applications University of Minnesota
Arnd ScheelSchool of Mathematics University of Minnesota
L. Ridgway ScottDepartment of Computer Science University of Chicago
Tsvetanka SendovaInstitute for Mathematics and its Applications University of Minnesota
Yuk ShamCenter for Drug Design University of Minnesota
Tei ShiDepartment of Chemistry University of Minnesota
Heinz SiedentopMathematisches Institut Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
Robert D. SkeelDepartment of Computer Science Purdue University
Lingchun SongDepartment of Chemistry University of Minnesota
Andrew M. SteinInstitute for Mathematics and its Applications University of Minnesota
Andrij TrokhymchukTheory of Solutions Department Institute for condensed matter physics
Donald G. TruhlarSupercomputer Institute and Department of Chemistry University of Minnesota
Mark E. TuckermanDepartment of Chemistry New York University
Erkan TüzelInstitute for Mathematics and its Applications University of Minnesota
Sinisa VukovicDepartment of Chemistry University of Toronto
Jason A. WagonerDepartment of Chemistry Stanford University
Zhian WangInstitute for Mathematics and its Applications University of Minnesota
Zhongming WangDepartment of Mathematics University of California, San Diego
Guowei WeiDepartment of Mathematics Michigan State University
Kin-Yiu Wong University of Minnesota
Dexuan XieDepartment of Mathematical Sciences University of Wisconsin
Wei XiongInstitute for Mathematics and its Applications University of Minnesota
Ke YangDepartment of Chemistry University of Minnesota
Dmytro S. YershovComputer Science Department University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Norio YoshidaInstitute for Molecular Science National Institutes of Natural Sciences
Weigang ZhongInstitute for Mathematics and its Applications University of Minnesota
Yongcheng ZhouDepartment of Mathematics Colorado State University