Search for dissertations about: "Björn Wallner"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 7 swedish dissertations containing the words Björn Wallner.
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1. Protein Structure Prediction : Model Building and Quality Assessment
Abstract : Proteins play a crucial roll in all biological processes. The wide range of protein functions is made possible through the many different conformations that the protein chain can adopt. The structure of a protein is extremely important for its function, but to determine the structure of protein experimentally is both difficult and time consuming. READ MORE
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2. MYC and MexR interactions with DNA : a Small Angle Scattering perspective
Abstract : Protein-DNA complexes govern transcription, that is, the cellular mechanism that converts the information stored in the DNA into proteins. These complexes need to be highly dynamic to respond to external factors that regulate their functions in agreement with what the cells need at that time. READ MORE
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3. Development and Application of Computational Models for Peptide-Protein Complexes
Abstract : Protein-protein interactions between a protein and a smaller protein fragment or a disordered segment of a protein are called peptide-protein interactions. Such interactions are commonplace in nature and vital for normal cell function in humans. READ MORE
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4. Coding to cure : NMR and thermodynamic software applied to congenital heart disease research
Abstract : Regardless of scientific field computers have become pivotal tools for data analysis and the field of structural biology is not an exception. Here, computers are the main tools used for tasks including structural calculations of proteins, spectral analysis of nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy data and fitting mathematical models to data. READ MORE
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5. On protein structure, function and modularity from an evolutionary perspective
Abstract : We are compounded entities, given life by a complex molecular machinery. When studying these molecules we have to make sense of a diverse set of dynamical nanostructures with wast and intricate patterns of interactions. READ MORE