The definition of computational methodologies for the inference of molecular structural information plays a relevant role in disciplines as drug discovery and metabolic engineering, since the functionality of a biochemical molecule is determined by its three-dimensional structure. In this work, we present an automatic methodology to solve the Molecular Distance Geometry Problem, that is, to determine the best three-dimensional shape that satisfies a given set of target inter-atomic distances. In particular, our method is designed to cope with incomplete distance information derived from Nuclear Magnetic Resonance measurements. To tackle this problem, that is known to be NP-hard, we present a memetic method that combines two soft-computing algorithms - Particle Swarm Optimization and Genetic Algorithms - with a local search approach, to improve the effectiveness of the crossover mechanism. We show the validity of our method on a set of reference molecules with a length ranging from 402 to 1003 atoms.
A memetic hybrid method for the Molecular Distance Geometry Problem with incomplete information
2014
Abstract
The definition of computational methodologies for the inference of molecular structural information plays a relevant role in disciplines as drug discovery and metabolic engineering, since the functionality of a biochemical molecule is determined by its three-dimensional structure. In this work, we present an automatic methodology to solve the Molecular Distance Geometry Problem, that is, to determine the best three-dimensional shape that satisfies a given set of target inter-atomic distances. In particular, our method is designed to cope with incomplete distance information derived from Nuclear Magnetic Resonance measurements. To tackle this problem, that is known to be NP-hard, we present a memetic method that combines two soft-computing algorithms - Particle Swarm Optimization and Genetic Algorithms - with a local search approach, to improve the effectiveness of the crossover mechanism. We show the validity of our method on a set of reference molecules with a length ranging from 402 to 1003 atoms.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.