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      <div class="TdmEntry">Overall Objectives<ul><li class="tdmActPage"><a href="./uid3.html">Computational Challenges in Structural Biology</a></li></ul></div>
      <div class="TdmEntry">Research Program<ul><li><a href="uid9.html&#10;&#9;&#9;  ">Classifying and Mining Protein Structures and
Protein Interactions</a></li><li><a href="uid14.html&#10;&#9;&#9;  ">Integrative Multi-Component Assembly and Modeling</a></li></ul></div>
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	    2016</a> | <a href="http://www.inria.fr/en/teams/capsid">Presentation of the Project-Team CAPSID</a> | <a href="http://capsid.loria.fr/">CAPSID Web Site
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        <h2>Section: 
      Overall Objectives</h2>
        <h3 class="titre3">Computational Challenges in Structural Biology</h3>
        <p>Many of the processes within living organisms can be studied and
understood in terms of biochemical interactions between
large macromolecules such as DNA, RNA, and proteins.
To a first approximation, DNA and RNA may be considered to encode the blueprint for life,
whereas proteins make up the three-dimensional (3D) molecular machinery.
Many biological processes are governed by complex systems of proteins
which interact cooperatively to regulate the chemical composition within a
cell or to carry out a wide range of biochemical processes such as
photosynthesis, metabolism, and cell signalling, for example.
It is becoming increasingly feasible to isolate and characterise
some of the individual protein components of such systems,
but it still remains extremely difficult to achieve detailed models of how
these complex systems actually work.
Consequently, a new multidisciplinary approach called integrative structural biology
has emerged which aims to bring together experimental data from a wide
range of sources and resolution scales in order to meet this challenge
<a href="./bibliography.html#capsid-2016-bid0">[69]</a>, <a href="./bibliography.html#capsid-2016-bid1">[53]</a>.</p>
        <p>Understanding how biological systems work at the level of
3D molecular structures presents fascinating challenges for biologists and
computer scientists alike.
Despite being made from a small set of simple chemical building blocks,
protein molecules have a remarkable ability to self-assemble into complex
molecular machines which carry out very specific biological processes.
As such, these molecular machines may be considered as complex systems because
their properties are much greater than the sum of the properties of their
component parts.</p>
        <p>The overall objective of the Capsid team
is to develop algorithms and software to help study biological systems and
phenomena from a structural point of view.
In particular, the team aims to develop algorithms which can help to model the structures
of large multi-component biomolecular machines and to develop tools and techniques
to represent and mine knowledge of the 3D shapes of proteins and protein-protein interactions.
Thus, a unifying theme of the team is to tackle the recurring problem of
representing and reasoning about large 3D macromolecular shapes.
More specifically, our aim is to develop computational techniques to represent, analyse,
and compare the shapes and interactions of protein molecules in order to help better
understand how their 3D structures relate to their biological function.
In summary, the Capsid team focuses on the following closely related
topics in structural bioinformatics:</p>
        <ul>
          <li>
            <p class="notaparagraph"><a name="uid4"> </a>new approaches for knowledge discovery in structural databases,</p>
          </li>
          <li>
            <p class="notaparagraph"><a name="uid5"> </a>integrative multi-component assembly and modeling.</p>
          </li>
        </ul>
        <p>As indicated above,
structural biology is largely concerned with determining the 3D atomic structures
of proteins,
and then using these structures to study their biological properties and interactions.
Each of these activities can be extremely time-consuming.
Solving the 3D structure of even a single protein using X-ray crystallography or
nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy
can often take many months or even years of effort.
Even simulating the interaction between two proteins using a detailed atomistic molecular
dynamics simulation can consume many thousands of CPU-hours.
While most X-ray crystallographers, NMR spectroscopists, and molecular modelers often use
conventional sequence and structure alignment tools to help propose initial structural models
through the homology principle, they often study only individual structures or interactions
at a time.
Due to the difficulties outlined above, only relatively few research
groups are able to solve the structures of large multi-component systems.</p>
        <p>Similarly, most current algorithms for comparing protein structures,
and especially those for modeling protein interactions,
work only at the pair-wise level.
Of course, such calculations may be accelerated considerably
by using dynamic programming (DP) or fast Fourier transform (FFT) techniques.
However, it remains extremely challenging to scale up these techniques to model
multi-component systems.
For example, the use of high performance computing (HPC) facilities may be used
to accelerate arithmetically intensive shape-matching calculations,
but this generally does not help solve the fundamentally combinatorial nature of
many multi-component problems.
It is therefore necessary to devise heuristic hybrid approaches which can be tailored
to exploit various sources of domain knowledge.
We therefore set ourselves the following main computational objectives:</p>
        <ul>
          <li>
            <p class="notaparagraph"><a name="uid6"> </a>classify and mine protein structures and protein-protein interactions,</p>
          </li>
          <li>
            <p class="notaparagraph"><a name="uid7"> </a>develop multi-component assembly techniques for integrative structural biology.</p>
          </li>
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