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Amber

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This article is about a molecular dynamics application and force field. For more meanings of the word Amber, see Amber (disambiguation).
AMBER (an acronym for Assisted Model Building and Energy Refinement) is a family of force fields for molecular dynamics of biomolecules originally developed by the late Peter Kollman's group at the University of California, San Francisco. AMBER is also the name for the molecular dynamics simulation package that implements these force fields. Further development of both the force fields and software are now coordinated by David A. Case at The Scripps Research Institute.

Force Field

The term "AMBER force field" generally refers to the functional form used by the family of AMBER force fields. This form includes a number of parameters; each member of the family of AMBER force fields provides values for these parameters and has its own name.

Functional form

The functional form of the AMBER force field is
[V(r^N)=\sum_ \frac k_b (l-l_0)^2 + \sum_ \frac k_a (\theta - \theta_0)^2]
[+ \sum_ \frac V_n [1+cos(n omega- gamma)]] [+\sum_ ^ \sum_ ^N \left\\left[left(frac}} right)^ - left(frac}} right)^6 right]+ \frac^2}\right\}]
Note that despite the term force field, this equation defines the potential energy of the system; the force is the derivative of this potential with respect to position.

The meanings of right hand side terms are:

Parameter sets

To use the AMBER force field, it is necessary to have values for the parameters of the force field (e.g. force constants, equilibrium bond lengths and angles, charges). A fairly large number of these parameter sets exist, and are described in detail in the AMBER software user manual. Each parameter set has a name, and provides parameters for certain types of molecules.

Software

The AMBER software suite provides a set of programs for applying the AMBER forcefields to simluations of biomolecules. It is written in Fortran 90 and C with support for most major Unix-like systems and compilers. Development is conducted by a loose association of mostly academic labs. New versions are generally released in March of even numbered years; AMBER 8 was released in March 2004. The software is available under a site-license agreement, which includes full source, currently priced at US$400 for non-commercial and US$20,000 for commercial organizations.

Programs

See also

References

External links

 


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