Sciweavers

49 search results - page 2 / 10
» An approach to large scale identification of non-obvious str...
Sort
View
BMCBI
2010
156views more  BMCBI 2010»
13 years 5 months ago
Mathematical model for empirically optimizing large scale production of soluble protein domains
Background: Efficient dissection of large proteins into their structural domains is critical for high throughput proteome analysis. So far, no study has focused on mathematically ...
Eisuke Chikayama, Atsushi Kurotani, Takanori Tanak...
BMCBI
2005
149views more  BMCBI 2005»
13 years 5 months ago
The PD-(D/E)XK superfamily revisited: identification of new members among proteins involved in DNA metabolism and functional pre
Background: The PD-(D/E)XK nuclease superfamily, initially identified in type II restriction endonucleases and later in many enzymes involved in DNA recombination and repair, is o...
Jan Kosinski, Marcin Feder, Janusz M. Bujnicki
BMCBI
2008
124views more  BMCBI 2008»
13 years 5 months ago
Alignment of protein structures in the presence of domain motions
Background: Structural alignment is an important step in protein comparison. Well-established methods exist for solving this problem under the assumption that the structures under...
Roberto Mosca, Barbara Brannetti, Thomas R. Schnei...
BMCBI
2010
160views more  BMCBI 2010»
13 years 5 months ago
Identification of functional hubs and modules by converting interactome networks into hierarchical ordering of proteins
Background: Protein-protein interactions play a key role in biological processes of proteins within a cell. Recent high-throughput techniques have generated protein-protein intera...
Young-Rae Cho, Aidong Zhang
BMCBI
2007
142views more  BMCBI 2007»
13 years 5 months ago
SABERTOOTH: protein structural alignment based on a vectorial structure representation
Background: The task of computing highly accurate structural alignments of proteins in very short computation time is still challenging. This is partly due to the complexity of pr...
Florian Teichert, Ugo Bastolla, Markus Porto