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          Improving genome annotation, molecular
          structure and interactionprediction: an algorithmic study of biomolecular
          functions
 Project Leader:
          Anne Condon (Professor), Computer Science , UBC
 Phone Number:604-822-8175
 Fax Number: 604-822-5485
 E-mail Address: condon@cs.ubc.ca
 Web Page: http://www.cs.ubc.ca/~condon/
 
 Project
          Description
 
 Computational methods have transformed biological
          research. A striking example is the use of sophisticated
          algorithms in sequencing the human genome, for which the
          initial draft was completed in 2001. With the genomes of
          several other organisms now also in hand, the challenge
          is to understand the genome. Our goals are to develop new
          algorithms that will help to annotate genes and other
          functionally active parts of the genome or the cell, to
          predict the exact form of interactions between these
          components, and to uncover patterns of interaction in
          networks of proteins that cut across organisms. Central
          to our approaches will be consideration of the structure
          of proteins and RNA molecules. Structure in large part
          determines the function of these bio-molecules.
          Algorithms that exploit structural information are
          proving to significantly enhance the effectiveness of
          gene annotation schemes.
 
 This work has enormous relevance to our understanding of
          our bodies, and our evolutionary relationships to other
          species. We still do not know precisely how many genes we
          have, or what most of them do. New roles played by
          functionally active RNA molecules in the cell are still
          being discovered. Improved understanding will have
          applications in disease diagnosis and treatment. The
          ability to computationally predict the structure of
          molecules, and to design molecules with particular
          structures, is also important for development of
          micro-array technologies and even new treatment regimes
          and drugs.
 
 
 Page last
          updated: Oct 7, 2007 Page
          last updated by: Chris Thachuk
 Page
          buit by: Rosalía Aguirre-Hernández For
          questions or suggestions please contact Anne Condon,
          condon [at] cs.ubc.ca
 
 
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