<p>The papers collected in this volume reproduce contributions by leading sch- arstoaninternationalschoolandworkshopwhichwasorganizedandheldwith thegoaloftakinga snapshotofadiscipline undertumultuous growth. Indeed, the area of protein folding, docking and alignment is developing in response to need
Mathematical Methods for Protein Structure Analysis and Design: C.I.M.E. Summer School, Martina Franca, Italy, July 9-15, 2000. Advanced Lectures
โ Scribed by Giuseppe Lancia, Sorin Istrail (auth.), Concettina Guerra, Sorin Istrail (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 160
- Series
- Lecture Notes in Computer Science 2666 : Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
The papers collected in this volume reproduce contributions by leading sch- arstoaninternationalschoolandworkshopwhichwasorganizedandheldwith thegoaloftakinga snapshotofadiscipline undertumultuous growth. Indeed, the area of protein folding, docking and alignment is developing in response to needs for a mix of heterogeneous expertise spanning biology, chemistry, mathematics, computer science, and statistics, among others. Some of the problems encountered in this area are not only important for the scienti?c challenges they pose, but also for the opportunities they disclose intermsofmedicalandindustrialexploitation. Atypicalexampleiso?eredby protein-drug interaction (docking), a problem posing daunting computational problems at the crossroads of geometry, physics and chemistry, and, at the same time, a problem with unimaginable implications for the pharmacopoeia of the future. The schoolfocused on problems posed by the study of the mechanisms - hind protein folding, and explored di?erent ways of attacking these problems under objective evaluations of the methods. Together with a relatively small core of consolidated knowledge and tools, important re?ections were brought to this e?ort by studies in a multitude of directions and approaches. It is obviously impossible to predict which, if any, among these techniques will prove completely successful, but it is precisely the implicit dialectic among them that best conveys the current ?avor of the ?eld. Such unique diversity and richness inspired the format of the meeting, and also explains the slight departure of the present volume from the typical format in this series: the exposition of the current sediment is complemented here by a selection of quali?ed specialized contributions.
โฆ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages -
Protein Structure Comparison: Algorithms and Applications....Pages 1-33
Spatial Pattern Detection in Structural Bionformatics....Pages 35-56
Geometric Methods for Protein Structure Comparison....Pages 57-82
Identifying Flat Regions and Slabs in Protein Structures....Pages 83-97
OPTIMA: A New Score Function for the Detection of Remote Homologs....Pages 99-108
A Comparison of Methods for Assessing the Structural Similarity of Proteins....Pages 109-115
Prediction of Protein Secondary Structure at High Accuracy Using a Combination of Many Neural Networks....Pages 117-122
Self-consistent Knowledge-Based Approach to Protein Design....Pages 123-129
Protein Structure from Solid-State NMR....Pages 131-137
Learning Effective Amino-Acid Interactions....Pages 139-145
Proteinlike Properties of Simple Models....Pages 147-153
Back Matter....Pages -
โฆ Subjects
Algorithm Analysis and Problem Complexity; Discrete Mathematics in Computer Science; Database Management; Computer Graphics; Image Processing and Computer Vision; Bioinformatics
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