Sampling Rare Conformational Transitions with a Quantum Computer
Danial Ghamari, Philipp Hauke, Roberto Covino, and Pietro Faccioli

TL;DR
This paper presents a novel method combining machine learning, classical molecular dynamics, and quantum annealing to efficiently sample rare conformational transitions in biomolecular systems, overcoming limitations of traditional simulation techniques.
Contribution
It introduces a rigorous low-resolution dynamical model derived from functional integrals and employs quantum annealing to explore transition paths without biasing forces.
Findings
Quantum annealing generates uncorrelated trajectories
Enhanced sampling of transition regions in conformational space
Validation on a benchmark biomolecular transition
Abstract
Spontaneous structural rearrangements play a central role in the organization and function of complex biomolecular systems. In principle, physics-based computer simulations like Molecular Dynamics (MD) enable us to investigate these thermally activated processes with an atomic level of resolution. However, rare conformational transitions are intrinsically hard to investigate with MD, because an exponentially large fraction of computational resources must be invested to simulate thermal fluctuations in metastable states. Path sampling methods like Transition Path Sampling hold the great promise of focusing the available computational power on sampling the rare stochastic transition between metastable states. In these approaches, one of the outstanding limitations is to generate paths that visit significantly different regions of the conformational space at a low computational cost. To…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Spectroscopy and Quantum Chemical Studies · Quantum and electron transport phenomena
