this post was submitted on 19 Jul 2024
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Asklemmy
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SMaE
Here's what the intarrwebs say:
Folding@home: achievements from over twenty years of citizen science herald the exascale era https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10055475/
Here's waht FAH says: https://foldingathome.org/category/fah-achievements/
Here is an AI based summary of top breakthroughs:
Here are some of the biggest breakthroughs mentioned in the provided references:
Exascale Simulations for SARS-CoV-2:
Ab Initio Protein Folding Simulations:
Markov State Models for Protein Dynamics:
RNA Polymerase II Dynamics:
Ligand Modulation of GPCR Activation:
Nanotube Confinement Effects on Proteins:
Simulation and Experiment in Protein Folding:
Advances in Markov State Models:
Insights into Allosteric Sites:
GPCR Activation Pathways:
I don't see much in there. Doing the simulations is not the same as confirming the simulations. The question wasn't did they do they simulation but rather was any major usable outcome validated. Seems very little if anything.
The thing is that many of these things just can't be measured directly. You can use the information from the simulation to get a deeper understanding of e.g. some receptors (as was done), and use that information for something else. For example to optimize a binder for the receptor, or to manipulate the tonic signalling. But that's then often a paper building onto the findings from the simulation.
Yeah so that's the question, was any drug or other technique successfully optimized