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Evolving Methods for Macromolecular Crystallography [electronic resource] :The Structural Path to the Understanding of the Mechanismof Action of CBRN Agents / edited by Randy J. Read, Joel L. Sussman.

by Read, Randy J [editor.]; Sussman, Joel L [editor.]; SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: NATO Science Series: 245Publisher: Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands, 2007.Description: VIII, 191 p. online resource.ISBN: 9781402063169.Other title: Proceedings of the NATO Advanced Study Institute on Evolving Methods for Macromolecular Crystallography: The Structural Path to the Understanding of the Mechanism of Action of CBRN agents, Erice, Italy, 19-28 May 2005.Subject(s): Physics | Bioinformatics | Biology -- Data processing | Crystallography | Physics | Crystallography | Biophysics and Biological Physics | Bioinformatics | Computer Appl. in Life SciencesDDC classification: 548 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Succeeding with seeding: some practical advice -- Expression, purification, and crystallisationof membrane proteins -- Macromolecular cryo-crystallography -- Processing diffraction data with mosflm -- Sad phasing: basic concepts and high-throughput -- Likelihood-based experimental phasing in phaser -- Stochastic molecular replacement -- Likelihood-based molecular replacement in phaser -- Automated structure determination with phenix -- Density Modification In Main -- Ab initio phasing starting from low resolution -- Structural genomics of mycobacterium tuberculosis: a search for function and new drug targets -- Three-dimensional domain swapping and its relevance to conformational diseases -- Structural bioinformatics: from protein structure to function -- Single-particle imaging.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: X-ray crystallography is the pre-eminent technique for visualizing the structures of macromolecules at atomic resolution. These structures are central to understanding the detailed mechanisms of biological processes, and to discovering novel therapeutics using a structure-based approach. As yet, structures are known for only a small fraction of the proteins encoded by human and pathogenic genomes. To counter the myriad modern threats of disease, there is an urgent need to determine the structures of the thousands of proteins whose structure and function remain unknown. This volume draws on the expertise of leaders in the field of macromolecular crystallography to illuminate the dramatic developments that are accelerating progress in structural biology. Their contributions span the range of techniques from crystallization through data collection, structure solution and analysis, and show how modern high-throughput methods are contributing to a deeper understanding of medical problems.
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Succeeding with seeding: some practical advice -- Expression, purification, and crystallisationof membrane proteins -- Macromolecular cryo-crystallography -- Processing diffraction data with mosflm -- Sad phasing: basic concepts and high-throughput -- Likelihood-based experimental phasing in phaser -- Stochastic molecular replacement -- Likelihood-based molecular replacement in phaser -- Automated structure determination with phenix -- Density Modification In Main -- Ab initio phasing starting from low resolution -- Structural genomics of mycobacterium tuberculosis: a search for function and new drug targets -- Three-dimensional domain swapping and its relevance to conformational diseases -- Structural bioinformatics: from protein structure to function -- Single-particle imaging.

X-ray crystallography is the pre-eminent technique for visualizing the structures of macromolecules at atomic resolution. These structures are central to understanding the detailed mechanisms of biological processes, and to discovering novel therapeutics using a structure-based approach. As yet, structures are known for only a small fraction of the proteins encoded by human and pathogenic genomes. To counter the myriad modern threats of disease, there is an urgent need to determine the structures of the thousands of proteins whose structure and function remain unknown. This volume draws on the expertise of leaders in the field of macromolecular crystallography to illuminate the dramatic developments that are accelerating progress in structural biology. Their contributions span the range of techniques from crystallization through data collection, structure solution and analysis, and show how modern high-throughput methods are contributing to a deeper understanding of medical problems.

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