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Australian State/Territory : ACT
Socio-Economic Objective : Other
Research Topic : Computational Drug Design
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  • Funded Activity

    Discovery Projects - Grant ID: DP0346292

    Funder
    Australian Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $245,000.00
    Summary
    TOWARDS A COMPLETE DESCRIPTION OF HOW ENZYMES WORK: development of simulation methods and protocols, blind test predictions, and experimental validation. Enzymes catalyze quite fantastic chemistry under mild physiological conditions. Many special chemical concepts (such as "transition-state stabilization" and "entropy-enthalpy compensation") proposed to explain these powers are unnecessary. Uniquely for a catalyst, these powers are integral to the structure, properties and dynamics of the protei .... TOWARDS A COMPLETE DESCRIPTION OF HOW ENZYMES WORK: development of simulation methods and protocols, blind test predictions, and experimental validation. Enzymes catalyze quite fantastic chemistry under mild physiological conditions. Many special chemical concepts (such as "transition-state stabilization" and "entropy-enthalpy compensation") proposed to explain these powers are unnecessary. Uniquely for a catalyst, these powers are integral to the structure, properties and dynamics of the protein, as constrained and selected by evolution. The question is how do they work? Answering this requires energetic and thermodynamic analysis beyond current experimental techniques, but accessible by computer simulation. We aim to develop a robust toolkit of simulation methods and protocols, blind test them by predicting the mechanism of a new enzyme, with followup experimental validation.
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    Funded Activity

    Discovery Projects - Grant ID: DP0665816

    Funder
    Australian Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $260,000.00
    Summary
    Importance of conformational and electrostatic contributions in simulations of enzyme reaction mechanisms. The research will contribute to the development of biomolecular simulation in Australia by demonstrating its potential to complement experiment, and also promote the effective use of APAC (Australian national supercomputer facilities) resources by providing advanced programs and computational protocols for other researchers. It will assist the diffusion of computational biology technology i .... Importance of conformational and electrostatic contributions in simulations of enzyme reaction mechanisms. The research will contribute to the development of biomolecular simulation in Australia by demonstrating its potential to complement experiment, and also promote the effective use of APAC (Australian national supercomputer facilities) resources by providing advanced programs and computational protocols for other researchers. It will assist the diffusion of computational biology technology into industrial applications such as rational drug design and protein engineering, as, for example, in our associated Linkage project grant, and provide novel insights into protein engineering and other sorts of design, which transcend concepts currently used in biomimetic chemistry.
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    Funded Activity

    Linkage Projects - Grant ID: LP0562653

    Funder
    Australian Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $206,433.00
    Summary
    The Identification and Development of Strategies for Increasing Engineering Enrolments. There is a continuing nation-wide decline in high school student enrolment in higher level mathematics and science. This is already leading to a reduction in the number of students undertaking university engineering programs in Australia and the situation is expected to worsen. This project is directed toward a better understanding of the reasons for the trend and the development of strategies to reverse it. .... The Identification and Development of Strategies for Increasing Engineering Enrolments. There is a continuing nation-wide decline in high school student enrolment in higher level mathematics and science. This is already leading to a reduction in the number of students undertaking university engineering programs in Australia and the situation is expected to worsen. This project is directed toward a better understanding of the reasons for the trend and the development of strategies to reverse it. It aims to 1. Evaluate the most effective strategies that increase student's interests and understanding of engineering and increase participation in engineering studies. 2. Develop an optimised national communication strategy for promoting engineering studies to secondary students.
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    Funded Activity

    Linkage Projects - Grant ID: LP0347461

    Funder
    Australian Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $345,000.00
    Summary
    Why is the photosynthetic CO2-fixing enzyme, Rubisco, so inefficient? Dissection of the catalytic chemistry by computational simulation and experimental testing. Fixation of CO2 by the enzyme Rubisco during photosynthesis produces organic compounds which feed all life. Despite this critical role, Rubisco catalyses its reaction sluggishly and, worse, discriminates poorly between CO2 and O2, leading to useless products. Our combined expertise equips us to analyse Rubisco's mechanism using quantum- .... Why is the photosynthetic CO2-fixing enzyme, Rubisco, so inefficient? Dissection of the catalytic chemistry by computational simulation and experimental testing. Fixation of CO2 by the enzyme Rubisco during photosynthesis produces organic compounds which feed all life. Despite this critical role, Rubisco catalyses its reaction sluggishly and, worse, discriminates poorly between CO2 and O2, leading to useless products. Our combined expertise equips us to analyse Rubisco's mechanism using quantum-chemical methods and then test predictions experimentally. We will capitalise on our previous successful studies of Rubisco by addressing emergent issues which are the keys to understanding catalytic efficiency and CO2/O2 selectivity: the roles of a carbamylated lysine; the way CO2 addition is rendered irreversible; and the spin inversion inherent in O2 addition.
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