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CCL 10.01.04 PhD studentship - Comp. Struct. Biology - University of Duesseldorf, Germany | |||||||||
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From: jobs at ccl.net (do not send your application there!!!) To: jobs at ccl.net Date: Mon Jan 4 07:03:33 2010 Subject: 10.01.04 PhD studentship - Comp. Struct. Biology - University of Duesseldorf, Germany Applications are invited for a PhD student position available in the Computational Pharmaceutical Chemistry & Molecular Bioinformatics group (Prof. Dr. Holger Gohlke, http://cpclab.uni-duesseldorf.de) at the Heinrich-Heine-University, Duesseldorf, Germany, from April 1st, 2010. Introduction. Understanding the relationship between microscopic structure and macroscopic stability is important for developing strategies to improve protein stability at high temperatures. Recently, we demonstrated that macroscopic stability features of a protein can be predicted by characterizing the mechanical rigidity of a protein structure at atomic resolution during a thermal unfolding simulation. Furthermore, we were able to identify structural features from which a destabilization of the protein structure originates upon thermal unfolding (weak spots). At present, such knowledge is exploited in collaboration with an industrial partner for data-driven protein engineering by pointing to residues that should be varied to obtain a protein with higher thermostability. The approach is based on rigidity theory and is referred to as constraint network analysis (CNA) [Eng. Life Sci. 2008, 8, 507-522]. Aims of the project. While the above results provide a link between protein structure, mechanical rigidity, and thermostability, no relationship between protein structural stability and enzymatic activity has been established. Thus, in the present study, the CNA approach shall be further developed for analyzing microscopic stability features of mesophilic and thermophilic protein homologues, aiming at understanding how adaptive mutations maintain the balance between global rigidity (important for macroscopic stability) and local flexibility (important for activity) within the protein structures. Based on these insights, a method shall be developed for suggesting mutations at weak spots that lead to increased thermostability without compromising enzyme activity. Initially, the method shall be developed and validated on citrate synthase as a model system, for which crystal structures from different organisms are available that span a temperature range from 30 to 100C. Subsequently, the method shall be applied to Lip A, a lipase from B. subtilis, in a prospective manner. Experimental work to validate the predictions will be performed in the group of Prof. K.-E. Jaeger (Research center Julich). Ideal candidates would have a strong background in bioinformatics, biophysics, biochemistry, structural biology or related disciplines. Experience/interest in computational biology, molecular biology, enzymology as well as programming skills (C, Perl, Python), familiarity with the UNIX/Linux operating system, and an interest in developing new methodologies are highly desirable. Detailed information about living and studying in Duesseldorf is provided here: http://www.uni-duesseldorf.de/home/Fakultaeten/math_nat/Graduiertenkollegs/biostruct/Application/duesseldorf For questions related to the scientific aspect of the project, contact Holger Gohlke by email to gohlke===uni-duesseldorf.de . For application instructions and an application form, refer to http://www.gc.bci.tu-dortmund.de/en/vacancies/24 . Please note that the application deadline is January 15th, 2010.NOTE THAT E-MAIL ADDRESSES HAVE BEEN MODIFIED!!! All @ signs were changed to === to fight spam. Before you send e-mail, you need to change === to @ For example: change joe===big123comp.com to joe@big123comp.com Please let your prospective employer know that you learned about the job from the Computational Chemistry List Job Listing at http://www.ccl.net/jobs. If you are not interested in this particular position yourself, pass it to someone who might be -- some day they may return the favor. |
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