Of course, if you are working with a .docx instead of a .doc file in Word2011
for a Mac, you can always simply insert and “Equation” directly, rather than
the MathType version of Microsoft Equation under the “Insert/Objects” menu.
This seems to work fairly seamlessly, unless you convert the .doc
These can be created from almost any graphics program, including
powerpoint (see attached for a few simple examples).
P. Shing Ho, Ph.D.
Professor & Chair
Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
1870 Campus Delivery
Colorado State University
Fort Collins,
It is with great sadness to announce that Dr. Alexander Rich, Sedgwick
Professor of Biophysics at MIT, passed away on Monday April 27, 2015 at
Massachusetts General Hospital – he was 90.
Alex, a member of the RNA tie club, contributed significantly to our
understanding of RNA and DNA structure
I don't know whether your question is specifically for protein-ligand
interactions, protein-protein interactions, internal protein interactions,
etc., but one place to start is to look at some of the database tools already
available on-line, including, for example, CREDO from Tom Blundell's grou
Dear Alan,
This depends very much on whether the structures are similar in the
helical conformations or not, and on what question you are trying to
address. If these are nearly identical structures, it really does not
matter much what atoms you use for superposition, as long as they lie
along the
Announcement of a Workshop at the Aspen Center For Physics
“Molecular Physics of Non-Bonded Biomolecular Interactions”
Summer 2013
A proposal will be submitted to the Aspen Center for Physics (ACP) in Aspen
Colorado to sponsor a three week workshop focusing on efficient computational
approac
The structure of an all D-amino acid version of the HIV-1 protease was
solved in 1992 (see Milton, Milton, and Kent, 1992, Science,
256:1445-1448). The D-enzyme was seen to have a structure that is the
mirror image of the L-enzyme, and showed specificity for the enantiomeric
form of the chiral subs
There is a post-doctoral position is available in Dr. P. Shing Ho¹s
laboratory in the Department of Biochemistry & Molecular Biology at Colorado
State University to study halogen bonds for molecular engineering and drug
design. A wide range of projects ranging from X-ray crystallography to
biochem