They have developed a computational protocol called SEWING that builds new proteins from connected or disconnected pieces of existing structures. At least, that’s the ambition of scientists based at the University of North Carolina. They may, for example, serve specific purposes in medicine, research, and industry. The Frankenstein monster, stitched together from disparate body parts, proved to be an abomination, but stitched together proteins may fare better. Posted in Amino acids, Artificial Intelligence - Breakthroughs in Theories and Technologies, Artificial Intelligence - General, Autism Spectrum Disorders, Behavior, Behavioral Genetics, BioIT: BioInformatics, Biological Networks, Gene Regulation and Evolution, Biomarkers & Medical Diagnostics, Cancer - General, Cell Biology, Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Clinical & Translational, Clinical Diagnostics, Clinical Genomics, Cognition, Curation, Diagnostics and Lab Tests, Disease Biology, DNA repair, Gene Regulation, Genome Biology, Genomic Testing: Methodology for Diagnosis, Human aging, Immuno-Oncology & Genomics, Immunodiagnostics, Innovation in Immunology Diagnostics, Innovations in Neurophysiology & Neuropsychology, Lasers and photonics, Math, Medical Imaging Technology, Metabolism, Methods, Mutagenesis, Neurodegenerative Diseases, Neurological Diseases, Neuroscience, Physics, Proteins, Proteomics, Pyridine nucleotides, Schizophrenia, Sensors & Analytics, Transcriptomics, Unfolded Protein Response (UPR), tagged ADI-R subdomains, Alzheimer Disease, ASD1 peptoid, autism spectrum disorders (ASDs), GWAS genes, HRAS–RAF1 interaction, mitochondria-like organelles, peptoid binding, protein complexes in viral particles, protein–protein interaction (PPI) networks, Schizophrenia, SZ interactome on May 13, 2016|ĭisease related changes in proteomics, protein folding, protein-protein interaction, Volume 2 (Volume Two: Latest in Genomics Methodologies for Therapeutics: Gene Editing, NGS and BioInformatics, Simulations and the Genome Ontology), Part 1: Next Generation Sequencing (NGS)įrankenstein Proteins Stitched Together by Scientists
Disease related changes in proteomics, protein folding, protein-protein interaction