Dr. Ken Dill
Laufer Center for Physical & Quantitative Biology, Stony Brook University
Friday, October 6, 2017 - 11:00am
CCBR Red Room
Invited Speaker Seminar
Abstract:
Billions of years ago, nature invented one of the most important gizmos on earth: the protein molecule. At the miniature scale, a protein is stringy like a necklace,
and it contains information by virtue of the order in which the necklace pearls (amino acids) are strung together. Different protein molecules `fold' into
different compact `ball-of -string' shapes. And, each different shape performs different biological functions -- breaking down food, converting it to energy, driving
the motions in our muscles, converting light to electrical signals in our eyes, etc. Our understanding of the code of protein information –> shape –> function began nearly 60 years ago with the advent of structural biology and the protein folding problem. I
will give some history of our understanding of these amazing gizmos, and describe how we use it in today's computer-based drug discovery.
Host:
Dr. Hue Sun Chan
BiophysTO Lunchtime Talks
Poster: