World Community Grid
 
sign in
forgot member name? forgot password?
img.home.alt About us Research Forums Statistics My Grid Help


Active Research
Overview

Nutritious Rice for the World

Help Conquer Cancer

AfricanClimate@Home

Discovering Dengue
Drugs – Together

Human Proteome
Folding - Phase 2

FightAIDS@Home
About the Project
Research
Participants

Project FAQs
Inactive Research

Help Cure Muscular Dystrophy
Completed Research
Overview

Genome Comparison

Help Defeat Cancer

Human Proteome
Folding
Research - FightAIDS@Home

Research Participants

The FightAIDS@Home Project in the Olson Laboratory is the computational component of a larger project at TSRI funded by the National Institute of Health, and led by Dr. Olson. Researchers participating in the FightAids@Home Project are:

Arthur J. Olson, Ph.D. Professor, Department of Molecular Biology, TSRI
David S. Goodsell, Ph.D. Associate Professor, Department of Molecular Biology, TSRI
Rik Belew, Ph.D. Professor and Chairman of Cognitive Science, UCSD
Garrett M. Morris, D. Phil., Staff Scientist, Department of Molecular Biology, TSRI
William Lindstrom, Ph.D. Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Department of Molecular Biology , TSRI
Alexandre Gillet, Computer System Administrator
Max Chang, Bioinformatics Graduate Student (with R. Belew), UCSD

Other laboratories within the project utilize the information generated by the computations in selecting, synthesizing, characterizing and testing new inhibitor molecules against HIV. These collaborating laboratories are:

The Elder Laboratory - Virology and Molecular Biology. The Elder laboratory produces mutational variants of the HIV Protease and develops and tests candidate inhibitors in vitro (ie. In the test tube).
The Sharpless Laboratory - Synthetic Chemistry. The Sharpless Laboratory (Prof. Barry Sharpless won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 2001) designs strategies for synthesizing libraries of chemical compounds to test as potential inhibitors of HIV protease.
The Stout Laboratory - Xray Crystallography. The Stout Laboratory experimentally determines the detailed atomic structures of HIV protease mutations and complexes of these structures with inhibitors.
The Torbett Laboratory - The Torbet Laboratory develops cell-based systems for producing HIV proteins and for testing the effects of potential inhibitors on the virus in living cells.
The Wlodawer Laboratory - Xray Crystallography. Crystallography The Wlodawer is a pioneer in the structural biology of HIV. They experimentally determine the structures of HIV protease in complex with promising inhibitors.
The Wong Laboratory - Synthetic Chemistry. The Wong Laboratory designs and synthesizes chemical inhibitors of HIV protease and other viral pathogens.



Below is a diagram of the interactions within the TSRI HIV Program Project.

TSRI Laboratory Interaction

Return to Top 
Submit Research

World Community Grid's Advisory Board is looking for new research projects that can benefit from grid technology and have a positive impact on humanity.
Learn More

Visit the Forums

If you need technical assistance beyond what's available in Help, please visit the forums to post your questions and get answers on how others are using World Community Grid.

Tell A Friend

Help accelerate humanitarian research even further by telling your friends about World Community Grid.

Powered by IBM

privacy | sitemap | contact us