Retraction notice to "Analysis of Conocurvone, Ganoderic acid A and Oleuropein molecules against the main protease molecule of COVID-19 by in silico approaches: Molecular dynamics docking studies" [Engineering Analysis with Boundary Elements volume 150 (2023) Pages 583-598]
[This retracts the article DOI: 10.1016/j.enganabound.2023.02.043.].
Analysis of Conocurvone, Ganoderic acid A and Oleuropein molecules against the main protease molecule of COVID-19 by approaches: Molecular dynamics docking studies
Traditional medicines against COVID-19 have taken important outbreaks evidenced by multiple cases, controlled clinical research, and randomized clinical trials. Furthermore, the design and chemical synthesis of protease inhibitors, one of the latest therapeutic approaches for virus infection, is to search for enzyme inhibitors in herbal compounds to achieve a minimal amount of side-effect medications. Hence, the present study aimed to screen some naturally derived biomolecules with anti-microbial properties (anti-HIV, antimalarial, and anti-SARS) against COVID-19 by targeting coronavirus main protease via molecular docking and simulations. Docking was performed using SwissDock and Autodock4, while molecular dynamics simulations were performed by the GROMACS-2019 version. The results showed that Oleuropein, Ganoderic acid A, and conocurvone exhibit inhibitory actions against the new COVID-19 proteases. These molecules may disrupt the infection process since they were demonstrated to bind at the coronavirus major protease's active site, affording them potential leads for further research against COVID-19.
Numerical solution of COVID-19 pandemic model via finite difference and meshless techniques
In the present paper, a reaction-diffusion epidemic mathematical model is proposed for analysis of the transmission mechanism of the novel coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). The mathematical model contains six-time and space-dependent classes, namely; Susceptible, Exposed, Asymptomatically infected, Symptomatic infected, Quarantine, and Recovered or Removed (SEQIIR). The threshold number R is calculated by utilizing the next-generation matrix approach. In addition to the simple explicit procedure, the mathematical epidemiological model with diffusion is simulated through the operator splitting approach based on finite difference and meshless methods. Stability analysis of the disease free and endemic equilibrium points of the model is investigated. Simulation results of the model with and without diffusion are presented in detail. A comparison of the obtained numerical results of both the models is performed in the absence of an exact solution. The correctness of the solution is verified through mutual comparison and partly, via theoretical analysis as well.
A mathematical model of coronavirus transmission by using the heuristic computing neural networks
In this study, the nonlinear mathematical model of COVID-19 is investigated by stochastic solver using the scaled conjugate gradient neural networks (SCGNNs). The nonlinear mathematical model of COVID-19 is represented by coupled system of ordinary differential equations and is studied for three different cases of initial conditions with suitable parametric values. This model is studied subject to seven class of human population () and individuals are categorized as: susceptible (), exposed (), quarantined (), asymptotically diseased (), symptomatic diseased () and finally the persons removed from COVID-19 and are denoted by (). The stochastic numerical computing SCGNNs approach will be used to examine the numerical performance of nonlinear mathematical model of COVID-19. The stochastic SCGNNs approach is based on three factors by using procedure of verification, sample statistics, testing and training. For this purpose, large portion of data is considered, i.e., 70%, 16%, 14% for training, testing and validation, respectively. The efficiency, reliability and authenticity of stochastic numerical SCGNNs approach are analysed graphically in terms of error histograms, mean square error, correlation, regression and finally further endorsed by graphical illustrations for absolute errors in the range of 10 to 10 for each scenario of the system model.
SARS-CoV-2 rate of spread in and across tissue, groundwater and soil: A meshless algorithm for the fractional diffusion equation
The epidemiological aspects of the viral dynamic of the SARS-CoV-2 have become increasingly crucial due to major questions and uncertainties around the unaddressed issues of how corpse burial or the disposal of contaminated waste impacts nearby soil and groundwater. Here, a theoretical framework base on a meshless algorithm using the moving least squares (MLS) shape functions is adopted for solving the time-fractional model of the viral diffusion in and across three different environments including water, tissue, and soil. Our computations predict that by considering the (order of fractional derivative) best fit to experimental data, the virus has a traveling distance of in water after 22, regardless of the source of contamination (e.g., from tissue or soil). The outcomes and extrapolations of our study are fundamental for providing valuable benchmarks for future experimentation on this topic and ultimately for the accurate description of viral spread across different environments. In addition to COVID-19 relief efforts, our methodology can be adapted for a wide range of applications such as studying virus ecology and genomic reservoirs in freshwater and marine environments.
An arbitrary Lagrangian Eulerian smoothed particle hydrodynamics (ALE-SPH) method with a boundary volume fraction formulation for fluid-structure interaction
We present a new weakly-compressible smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) method capable of modeling non-slip fixed and moving wall boundary conditions. The formulation combines a boundary volume fraction (BVF) wall approach with the transport-velocity SPH method. The resulting method, named SPH-BVF, offers detection of arbitrarily shaped solid walls on-the-fly, with small computational overhead due to its local formulation. This simple framework is capable of solving problems that are difficult or infeasible for standard SPH, namely flows subject to large shear stresses or at moderate Reynolds numbers, and mass transfer in deformable boundaries. In addition, the method extends the transport-velocity formulation to reaction-diffusion transport of mass in Newtonian fluids and linear elastic solids, which is common in biological structures. Taken together, the SPH-BVF method provides a good balance of simplicity and versatility, while avoiding some of the standard obstacles associated with SPH: particle penetration at the boundaries, tension instabilities and anisotropic particle alignments, that hamper SPH from being applied to complex problems such as fluid-structure interaction in a biological system.
ZZ-Type a posteriori error estimators for adaptive boundary element methods on a curve
In the context of the adaptive finite element method (FEM), ZZ-error estimators named after Zienkiewicz and Zhu (1987) [52] are mathematically well-established and widely used in practice. In this work, we propose and analyze ZZ-type error estimators for the adaptive boundary element method (BEM). We consider weakly singular and hyper-singular integral equations and prove, in particular, convergence of the related adaptive mesh-refining algorithms. Throughout, the theoretical findings are underlined by numerical experiments.
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Only very recently, Sayas [The validity of Johnson-Nédélec's BEM-FEM coupling on polygonal interfaces. SIAM J Numer Anal 2009;47:3451-63] proved that the Johnson-Nédélec one-equation approach from [On the coupling of boundary integral and finite element methods. Math Comput 1980;35:1063-79] provides a stable coupling of finite element method (FEM) and boundary element method (BEM). In our work, we now adapt the analytical results for different a posteriori error estimates developed for the symmetric FEM-BEM coupling to the Johnson-Nédélec coupling. More precisely, we analyze the weighted-residual error estimator, the two-level error estimator, and different versions of (h-h/2)-based error estimators. In numerical experiments, we use these estimators to steer h-adaptive algorithms, and compare the effectivity of the different approaches.
A boundary integral approach to analyze the viscous scattering of a pressure wave by a rigid body
The paper provides boundary integral equations for solving the problem of viscous scattering of a pressure wave by a rigid body. By using this mathematical tool uniqueness and existence theorems are proved. Since the boundary conditions are written in terms of velocities, vector boundary integral equations are obtained for solving the problem. The paper introduces single-layer viscous potentials and also a stress tensor. Correspondingly, a viscous double-layer potential is defined. The properties of all these potentials are investigated.By representing the scattered field as a combination of a single-layer viscous potential and a double-layer viscous potential the problem is reduced to the solution of a singular vectorial integral equation of Fredholm type of the second kind.In the case where the stress vector on the boundary is the main quantity of interest the corresponding boundary singular integral equation is proved to have a unique solution.