Cleveland Clinic Simulates Large Proteins With Quantum-Centric Supercomputing
AI-summarised brief · reviewed before publication
Cleveland Clinic and IBM simulated a large protein using quantum-centric supercomputing, running on IBM's 156-qubit Heron r2 processors and two classical supercomputers in Japan. The simulation of a Trypsin protein with 12,635 atoms was the largest performed with quantum hardware, demonstrating the value of fragmentation and hybrid compute stacks. This approach shows quantum-centric supercomputing's potential in biology and chemistry, particularly in drug discovery, by integrating cutting-edge computational resources with algorithmic innovations.