blog_posts: 603389f62a
This data as json
id | createdDate | title | link | postExcerpt | featuredImageUrl | hash | contributors | modifiedDate | displayDate |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
blog-posts#18-9312 | 2020-11-25 15:43:50 | A new key to unlocking drug discovery | https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/publicsector/new-key-unlocking-drug-discovery/ | Be it aspirin for headache, or statin for cholesterol, or amoxicillin as an antibiotic, there are small molecules that we refer to as drugs that can offer therapeutic remedy. Given the range of possible molecule to protein combinations, finding the right small molecule that is able to bind strongly to a certain target site and inhibit its function is a time-intensive and challenging feat. Enter VirtualFlow, a new open-source software that performs screens, essentially matchmaking between molecules and proteins. Harvard Medical School researchers developed the VirtualFlow platform that tests compounds through computer simulations. Using AWS and an AWS Cloud Credit for Research grant, the researchers demonstrated that VirtualFlow is able to run on the cloud. | https://d2908q01vomqb2.cloudfront.net/9e6a55b6b4563e652a23be9d623ca5055c356940/2020/11/25/national-cancer-institute-s9WLlvDlbx4-unsplash2-300x150.jpg | 603389f62a | Angela Wu | 2020-11-25 17:27:06 | 25 Nov 2020 |
Links from other tables
- 13 rows from blog_post_hash in blog_post_tags