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      CHARMM: the biomolecular simulation program.

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          Abstract

          CHARMM (Chemistry at HARvard Molecular Mechanics) is a highly versatile and widely used molecular simulation program. It has been developed over the last three decades with a primary focus on molecules of biological interest, including proteins, peptides, lipids, nucleic acids, carbohydrates, and small molecule ligands, as they occur in solution, crystals, and membrane environments. For the study of such systems, the program provides a large suite of computational tools that include numerous conformational and path sampling methods, free energy estimators, molecular minimization, dynamics, and analysis techniques, and model-building capabilities. The CHARMM program is applicable to problems involving a much broader class of many-particle systems. Calculations with CHARMM can be performed using a number of different energy functions and models, from mixed quantum mechanical-molecular mechanical force fields, to all-atom classical potential energy functions with explicit solvent and various boundary conditions, to implicit solvent and membrane models. The program has been ported to numerous platforms in both serial and parallel architectures. This article provides an overview of the program as it exists today with an emphasis on developments since the publication of the original CHARMM article in 1983.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Comput Chem
          Journal of computational chemistry
          Wiley
          1096-987X
          0192-8651
          Jul 30 2009
          : 30
          : 10
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Laboratory of Computational Biology, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892, USA. brbrooks@helix.nih.gov
          Article
          NIHMS101618
          10.1002/jcc.21287
          2810661
          19444816
          b7a1fa06-5ce6-4736-aa0e-aeafe3de2f67
          Copyright 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
          History

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