AbstractInherent flexibility and conformational heterogeneity in proteins can often result in the absence of loops and even entire domains in structures determined by x-ray crystallographic or NMR methods. X-ray solution scattering offers the possibility of obtaining complementary information regarding the structures of these disordered protein regions. Methods are presented for adding missing loops or domains by fixing a known structure and building the unknown regions to fit the experimental scattering data obtained from the entire particle. Simulated annealing was used to minimize a scoring function containing the discrepancy between the experimental and calculated patterns and the relevant penalty terms. In low-resolution models where i...
AbstractSmall-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) is a biophysical method to study the overall shape and s...
SummaryReduced numbers of frictional/scattering centers are essential for tractable hydrodynamic and...
Protein folding is a reaction in which an extended polypeptide chain acquires maximal packing throug...
ABSTRACT Inherent flexibility and conformational heterogeneity in proteins can often result in the a...
AbstractInherent flexibility and conformational heterogeneity in proteins can often result in the ab...
AbstractAn ab initio method for building structural models of proteins from x-ray solution scatterin...
SummaryMultidomain proteins in which individual domains are connected by linkers often possess inher...
In the last few years, SAXS of biological materials has been rapidly evolving and promises to move s...
AbstractSmall-angle x-ray solution scattering (SAXS) is analyzed with a new method to retrieve conve...
It is widely accepted that disordered regions in proteins, part of which takes predominantly α-helic...
Structural analysis of flexible macromolecular systems such as intrinsically disordered or multidoma...
AbstractWe present a coarse residue-based computational method to rapidly compute the solution scatt...
Solving structures or structural ensembles of large macromolecular systems in solution poses a chall...
A major challenge in structural biology is to determine the configuration of domains and proteins in...
AbstractSmall-angle x-ray scattering (SAXS) is a powerful technique widely used to explore conformat...
AbstractSmall-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) is a biophysical method to study the overall shape and s...
SummaryReduced numbers of frictional/scattering centers are essential for tractable hydrodynamic and...
Protein folding is a reaction in which an extended polypeptide chain acquires maximal packing throug...
ABSTRACT Inherent flexibility and conformational heterogeneity in proteins can often result in the a...
AbstractInherent flexibility and conformational heterogeneity in proteins can often result in the ab...
AbstractAn ab initio method for building structural models of proteins from x-ray solution scatterin...
SummaryMultidomain proteins in which individual domains are connected by linkers often possess inher...
In the last few years, SAXS of biological materials has been rapidly evolving and promises to move s...
AbstractSmall-angle x-ray solution scattering (SAXS) is analyzed with a new method to retrieve conve...
It is widely accepted that disordered regions in proteins, part of which takes predominantly α-helic...
Structural analysis of flexible macromolecular systems such as intrinsically disordered or multidoma...
AbstractWe present a coarse residue-based computational method to rapidly compute the solution scatt...
Solving structures or structural ensembles of large macromolecular systems in solution poses a chall...
A major challenge in structural biology is to determine the configuration of domains and proteins in...
AbstractSmall-angle x-ray scattering (SAXS) is a powerful technique widely used to explore conformat...
AbstractSmall-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) is a biophysical method to study the overall shape and s...
SummaryReduced numbers of frictional/scattering centers are essential for tractable hydrodynamic and...
Protein folding is a reaction in which an extended polypeptide chain acquires maximal packing throug...