Sciweavers

796 search results - page 2 / 160
» A New Approach to Protein Identification
Sort
View
BMCBI
2007
157views more  BMCBI 2007»
13 years 5 months ago
Statistical learning of peptide retention behavior in chromatographic separations: a new kernel-based approach for computational
Background: High-throughput peptide and protein identification technologies have benefited tremendously from strategies based on tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) in combination wi...
Nico Pfeifer, Andreas Leinenbach, Christian G. Hub...
BMCBI
2010
95views more  BMCBI 2010»
13 years 5 months ago
An effective approach for identification of in vivo protein-DNA binding sites from paired-end ChIP-Seq data
Background: ChIP-Seq, which combines chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) with high-throughput massively parallel sequencing, is increasingly being used for identification of prot...
Congmao Wang, Jie Xu, Dasheng Zhang, Zoe A. Wilson...
BMCBI
2008
131views more  BMCBI 2008»
13 years 5 months ago
Modifying the DPClus algorithm for identifying protein complexes based on new topological structures
Background: Identification of protein complexes is crucial for understanding principles of cellular organization and functions. As the size of protein-protein interaction set incr...
Min Li, Jianer Chen, Jianxin Wang, Bin Hu, Gang Ch...
BMCBI
2006
207views more  BMCBI 2006»
13 years 5 months ago
A new measure for functional similarity of gene products based on Gene Ontology
Background: Gene Ontology (GO) is a standard vocabulary of functional terms and allows for coherent annotation of gene products. These annotations provide a basis for new methods ...
Andreas Schlicker, Francisco S. Domingues, Jö...
BMCBI
2007
126views more  BMCBI 2007»
13 years 5 months ago
High-throughput identification of interacting protein-protein binding sites
Background: With the advent of increasing sequence and structural data, a number of methods have been proposed to locate putative protein binding sites from protein surfaces. Ther...
Jo-Lan Chung, Wei Wang, Philip E. Bourne