Scientists at IRB Barcelona and BSC publish the world's largest video data bank of proteins
After four years of conducting intensive calculations in the supercomputer MareNostrum at the Barcelona Supercomputing Center, scientists headed by Modesto Orozco at the Institute for Research in Biomedicine (IRB Barcelona) have presented the world's largest data base on protein motions. Called MoDEL, this new database holds more than 1,700 proteins and is partially accessible through Internet to researchers worldwide. MoDEL has been developed to study the basic biology of proteins and to accelerate and facilitate the design of new pharmaceutical agents. "Nowadays we design drugs as if the proteins against which they are to act were static and this goes a long way to explain failures in the development of new drug therapies because this is not a true scenario. With MoDEL this problem is solved because it offers the user from 10,000 to 100,000 photos per protein, and these confer movement to these structures and allow a more accurate design", says Orozco, head of the "Molecular modelling and bioinformatics" group at IRB Barcelona, director of the Life Sciences Programme of the Barcelona Supercomputing Center and full professor at the University of Barcelona. According to this researcher, several pharmaceutical companies are already using the MoDEL strategy to develop the first drugs against cancer and inflammatory diseases, which could become available this year.
A project in expansion
The scientists that develop MoDEL work from an international catalogue of static protein structures (approximately 40,000) called the Protein Data Bank (PDB). "1,700 videos of proteins from the 40,000 that make up the PDB may appear to be a small proportion, but many of the structures in the PDB are very similar. Therefore, following internationally established similarity criteria, we are representing about 40% of the proteins with a known structure".
But for Modesto Orozco the most relevant point is that MoDEL is now covering more than 30% of human proteins structures that are of pharmacological interest, that is to say, those that are potential targets of a new drug. "We obtained this datum through a very strict test so we consider that we are in fact covering more. However, MoDEL will continue to grow and this can be achieved more quickly because the system is well established". According to the researchers, the main objective is to focus on relevant proteins in human diseases and in a period of between 2 and 3 years cover 80% of pharmaceutical targets.
In order to undertake the MoDEL project, Orozco and his group are supported by resources provided by IRB Barcelona, the Barcelona SuperComputing Center, the Marcelino Botín Foundation, the Fundación Genoma España, the National Bioinformatics Institute and several European projects.
Source: Institute for Research in Biomedicine (IRB Barcelona)
Related
- First observation of the folding of a nucleic acidTue, 21 Sep 2010, 11:17:01 EDT
- First-ever high-resolution observations of DNA unfoldingThu, 20 May 2010, 11:56:20 EDT
- 'Data motion metric' needed for supercomputer rankings, says SDSC's SnavelyWed, 10 Aug 2011, 21:37:57 EDT
- Scientists identify the largest network of protein interactions related to Alzheimer's diseaseThu, 16 Dec 2010, 11:25:37 EST
- Opposing functions of a key molecule in the development of organismsFri, 12 Mar 2010, 9:59:16 EST
Articles on the same topic
- New research provides effective battle planning for supercomputer warThu, 11 Nov 2010, 12:35:30 EST
Other sources
- World's Largest Video Protein Database Promises Rapid Drug Developmentfrom PopSciThu, 11 Nov 2010, 16:00:27 EST
- New research provides effective battle planning for supercomputer warfrom Science BlogThu, 11 Nov 2010, 12:50:21 EST
- Scientists at IRB Barcelona and BSC publish the world’s largest video data bank of proteinsfrom Science BlogThu, 11 Nov 2010, 11:20:27 EST
- Spanish scientists publish the world's largest video data bank of proteinsfrom PhysorgThu, 11 Nov 2010, 10:50:28 EST
- Proteins in motion: World’s largest video database of proteins for the pharmaceutical industry publishedfrom Science DailyThu, 11 Nov 2010, 9:20:40 EST
Latest Science Newsletter
Get the latest and most popular science news articles of the week in your Inbox! It's free!Learn more about
Check out our next project, Biology.Net
Popular science news articles
- Allosaurus fed more like a falcon than a crocodile, new study finds
- Human-like opponents lead to more aggression in video game players, UConn study finds
- Origins of human culture linked to rapid climate change
- Soft matter offers new ways to study how ordered materials arrange themselves
- Reducing caloric intake delays nerve cell loss
- Allosaurus fed more like a falcon than a crocodile, new study finds
- Invasive crazy ants are displacing fire ants in areas throughout southeastern US
- Beautiful 'flowers' self-assemble in a beaker
- Scientific insurgents say 'Journal Impact Factors' distort science
- GPS solution provides 3-minute tsunami alerts