Computational methods are increasingly gaining importance as an aid in identifying active sites. Mostly these methods tend to have structural information that supplement sequence conservation based analyses. Development of tools that compute electrostatic potentials has further improved our ability to better characterize the active site residues in proteins. We have described a computational methodology for detecting active sites based on structural and electrostatic conformity-CataLytic Active Site Prediction (CLASP). In our pipelined model, physical 3D signature of any particular enzymatic function as defined by its active sites is used to obtain spatially congruent matches. While previous work has revealed that catalytic residues have la...
Predicting the location of the active site, and the identity of the catalytic residues, is an import...
The aim of this thesis, which is based on the coordinate data from known X-ray crystal and nuclear m...
Background: A common assumption about enzyme active sites is that their structures are highly conser...
Biological pathways are subject to subtle manipulations that achieve a wide range of functional vari...
<div><p>Biological pathways are subject to subtle manipulations that achieve a wide range of functio...
BACKGROUND: Identifying the active site of an enzyme is a crucial step in functional studies. While ...
Enzymes catalyse a huge variety of biochemical reactions, and often the same function might evolve i...
<div><p>The pathways of proton abstraction (PA), a key aspect of most catalytic reactions, is often ...
<div><p>The ability of an enzyme to select and act upon a specific class of compounds with unerring ...
The ability of an enzyme to select and act upon a specific class of compounds with unerring precisio...
The pathways of proton abstraction (PA), a key aspect of most catalytic reactions, is often controve...
Abstract: A scoring method for the prediction of catalytically important residues in enzyme structur...
Motivation: [Currently, 25 % of proteins annotated in Pfam have their function unknown. One way of p...
An important aspect of the functional annotation of enzymes is not only the type of reaction catalys...
The pathways of proton abstraction (PA), a key aspect of most catalytic reactions, is often controve...
Predicting the location of the active site, and the identity of the catalytic residues, is an import...
The aim of this thesis, which is based on the coordinate data from known X-ray crystal and nuclear m...
Background: A common assumption about enzyme active sites is that their structures are highly conser...
Biological pathways are subject to subtle manipulations that achieve a wide range of functional vari...
<div><p>Biological pathways are subject to subtle manipulations that achieve a wide range of functio...
BACKGROUND: Identifying the active site of an enzyme is a crucial step in functional studies. While ...
Enzymes catalyse a huge variety of biochemical reactions, and often the same function might evolve i...
<div><p>The pathways of proton abstraction (PA), a key aspect of most catalytic reactions, is often ...
<div><p>The ability of an enzyme to select and act upon a specific class of compounds with unerring ...
The ability of an enzyme to select and act upon a specific class of compounds with unerring precisio...
The pathways of proton abstraction (PA), a key aspect of most catalytic reactions, is often controve...
Abstract: A scoring method for the prediction of catalytically important residues in enzyme structur...
Motivation: [Currently, 25 % of proteins annotated in Pfam have their function unknown. One way of p...
An important aspect of the functional annotation of enzymes is not only the type of reaction catalys...
The pathways of proton abstraction (PA), a key aspect of most catalytic reactions, is often controve...
Predicting the location of the active site, and the identity of the catalytic residues, is an import...
The aim of this thesis, which is based on the coordinate data from known X-ray crystal and nuclear m...
Background: A common assumption about enzyme active sites is that their structures are highly conser...