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BIOINFORMATICS
2008

Optimal design of thermally stable proteins

13 years 4 months ago
Optimal design of thermally stable proteins
Motivation: For many biotechnological purposes, it is desirable to redesign proteins to be more structurally and functionally stable at higher temperatures. For example, chemical reactions are intrinsically faster at higher temperatures, so using enzymes that are stable at higher temperatures would lead to more efficient industrial processes. We describe an innovative and computationally efficient method called Improved Configurational Entropy (ICE), which can be used to redesign a protein to be more thermally stable (i.e., stable at high temperatures). This can be accomplished by systematically modifying the amino acid sequence via local structural entropy (LSE) minimization. The minimization problem is modeled as a shortest path problem in an acyclic graph with non-negative weights and is solved efficiently using Dijkstra's method.
Ryan M. Bannen, Vanitha Suresh, George N. Phillips
Added 08 Dec 2010
Updated 08 Dec 2010
Type Journal
Year 2008
Where BIOINFORMATICS
Authors Ryan M. Bannen, Vanitha Suresh, George N. Phillips Jr, Stephen J. Wright, Julie C. Mitchell
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