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Biophysical Journal 63: 1683-1688 (1992)
© 1992 the Biophysical Society

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Teaching macromolecular modeling.

S C Harvey and R K Tan

Department of Biochemistry, University of Alabama, Birmingham 35294.

ABSTRACT

Training newcomers to the field of macromolecular modeling is as difficult as is training beginners in x-ray crystallography, nuclear magnetic resonance, or other methods in structural biology. In one or two lectures, the most that can be conveyed is a general sense of the relationship between modeling and other structural methods. If a full semester is available, then students can be taught how molecular structures are built, manipulated, refined, and analyzed on a computer. Here we describe a one-semester modeling course that combines lectures, discussions, and a laboratory using a commercial modeling package. In the laboratory, students carry out prescribed exercises that are coordinated to the lectures, and they complete a term project on a modeling problem of their choice. The goal is to give students an understanding of what kinds of problems can be attacked by molecular modeling methods and which problems are beyond the current capabilities of those methods.







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Copyright © 1992 by the Biophysical Society.