Message boards : News : Rosetta@home has contributed to a number of recent publications. Congratulations and thank you!
Author | Message |
---|---|
Admin Project administrator Send message Joined: 1 Jul 05 Posts: 4805 Credit: 0 RAC: 0 |
In Nature: building 20,000 new drug candidates. New de novo designed "mini-protein" binders were custom built to target either a deadly virus or a potent toxin and were shown to afford protection to mice. Read more. Sensors for the potent opioid fentanyl. Using a fully-automated Rosetta design pipeline, high-affinity fentanyl sensors capable of detecting environmental fentanyl were produced. Read more. In Science: data-driven protein design. This work achieves the long-standing goal of a tight feedback cycle between computation and experiment and has the potential to transform computational protein design into a data-driven science. Rather than observing thousands of complex natural proteins to try to deduce their folding rules, over 15,000 new, simpler proteins were built – all designed using Rosetta. Through multiple design rounds, features that led to successful folding were learned and incorporated into the design pipeline. Read more. |
[VENETO] boboviz Send message Joined: 1 Dec 05 Posts: 1994 Credit: 9,549,688 RAC: 6,292 |
Well done!! |
Message boards :
News :
Rosetta@home has contributed to a number of recent publications. Congratulations and thank you!
©2024 University of Washington
https://www.bakerlab.org