Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
440301 Computer-Aided Design 2010 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

As the molecular shape determines the functions of a molecule, understanding molecular shapes is important for understanding the biological system of life and thus for designing drugs. To properly define a molecular shape, the definition and computation of the boundary or the surface of a molecule is the most fundamental information. Assuming the hard sphere model of atoms in a molecule, the van der Waals surface, the molecular surface (Connolly surface), and the offset surface (Lee–Richards surface) are the most common surfaces defined on a molecule in biochemistry and molecular biology. In this paper, we present important observations related to the topologies of the three types of surface on molecules and their relationships. We find that the topologies of all three surface types can be computed in O(m)O(m) time, and that the topology of one surface can be transformed to the topology of another in O(m)O(m) time, both in the worst case, where mm represents the number of simplexes on the boundary of a ββ-shape. The observations are made based on the recently announced theory of the ββ-shape, which can be efficiently computed from the quasi-triangulation, the dual of the Voronoi diagram of a molecule.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computer Graphics and Computer-Aided Design
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