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Dry Lab



A dry lab is a laboratory where computational or applied mathematical analyses are done on a computer generated model to simulate a phenomenon in the physical realm whether it be a molecule changing quantum states, the event horizon of a black hole or anything that otherwise might be too cumbersome or arduous to observe under normal laboratory conditions [1]. This term may also refer to a lab that uses primarily electronic equipment, for example, a robotics lab. A dry lab can also refer to a laboratory space for the storage of dry materials.[2] In the context of education, to dry lab means supplying fictional (yet plausible) results in lieu of performing the assigned experiment.

In silico chemistry

As computing power has grown exponentially this approach to research, often referred to as in silico, has amassed more attention especially in the area of bioinformatics. More specifically, within bioinformatics, is the study of proteins or proteomics which is the elucidation of their unknown structures and folding patterns. The general approach in the elucidation of protein structure has been to first purify a protein, crystallize it and then send X-rays through such a purified protein crystal to observe how these x-rays diffract into specific pattern--a process referred to as X-ray crystallography. However, many proteins, especially those which are found embedded in cellular membranes, are nearly impossible to crystallize due to their hydrophobic nature. Although other techniques exists, such as ramachandran plotting and spectroscopy, these alone generally do not lead to the full elucidation of protein structure or folding mechanisms.

Distributed computing

As a means of surpassing the limitations of these techniques, projects such as Folding@Home and Rosetta@Home are aimed at resolving this problem using computational analysis, this means of resolving protein structure is referred to as protein structure prediction. Although many labs have a slightly different approach, the main concept is to find from a myriad of protein conformations which conformation is of the lowest energy or, in the case of Folding@Home, to find relatively low energies of proteins that could cause the protein to misfold and aggregate other proteins to itself -- like in the case of sickle cell anemia. The general scheme in these projects is that a small number of computations are parsed to, or sent to be calculated on, a computer, generally a home computer, and then that computer analyzes the likelihood that a specific protein will take on a certain shape or conformation based on the amount of energy that is required for that protein to stay in that shape, this way of processing data is what is generally referred to as distributed computing. This analysis is done on an extraordinarily large number of different conformations, owing to the support of hundreds of thousands of home-based computers, in hopes to find the conformation of lowest possible energy or set of conformations of lowest possible energy. Although being able to prove that a certain conformation is of the lowest possible energy is rather difficult, it is possible, by observing the distribution of protein energies under the normal distribution or bell curve, with a reasonably large number of protein energy evaluations, to predict relatively closely what the expected lowest energy should be despite the total number of random conformations possible which as stated in the Levinthal Paradox are so many that such a prediction is almost impossible. There are other factors such as salt concentration, pH, ambient temperature or chaperonins, which are proteins that assist in the folding process of other proteins, that can greatly affect how a protein folds. However, if the given protein is shown to fold on its own, especially in vitro, these findings can be further supported. Once we can see how a protein folds then we can see how it works as a catalyst, or in intracellular communication, e.g. neuroreceptor-neurotransmitter interaction, how certain compounds may be used to enhance or prevent the function of these proteins and how an elucidated protein overall plays a role in diseases such as Alzheimer's Disease or Huntington's Disease[3].

Of course, there are many other avenues of research in which the dry lab approach has been implemented. Other physical phenomena, such as sound, properties of newly discovered or hypothetical compounds and quantum mechanics models have recently received more attention in this area of approach.

See also

  • Wet lab
  • Bio-X
  • Computer Simulation
  • Computational Physics
 
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Dry_Lab". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia.
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