Difference between revisions of "De novo structure prediction"

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==Further reading and resources==
 
==Further reading and resources==
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<div class="reference-box">[http://fold.it/portal/ FoldIt]</div>
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<div class="reference-box">[http://zhanglab.ccmb.med.umich.edu/ Zhang Lab (UMich)]</div>
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<div class="reference-box">{{RepoPDF|Zhang(2012)StructurePrediction.pdf|Y. Zhang (2012) Protein Structure Prediction. Encyclopedia of Life Sciences.}}</div>
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Revision as of 00:42, 8 November 2012

ab initio Structure Prediction


This page is a placeholder, or under current development; it is here principally to establish the logical framework of the site. The material on this page is correct, but incomplete.


Protein structure prediction


Summary ...



 

Contents

   

Further reading and resources


Malone & Oliver (2011) Microarrays, deep sequencing and the true measure of the transcriptome. BMC Biol 9:34. (pmid: 21627854)

PubMed ] [ DOI ] Microarrays first made the analysis of the transcriptome possible, and have produced much important information. Today, however, researchers are increasingly turning to direct high-throughput sequencing -- RNA-Seq -- which has considerable advantages for examining transcriptome fine structure -- for example in the detection of allele-specific expression and splice junctions. In this article, we discuss the relative merits of the two techniques, the inherent biases in each, and whether all of the vast body of array work needs to be revisited using the newer technology. We conclude that microarrays remain useful and accurate tools for measuring expression levels, and RNA-Seq complements and extends microarray measurements.