Researchers and Research Groups
Methods Research
These research groups are mostly interested in developing methodologies or technologies.
Bioinformatics Research Lab
David Kulp and Oliver Brock's group (UMass Computer Science) is interested in diverse topics including microarray resequencing by hybridization, protein folding, alternative splicing, and regulatory networks.
Michael Henson
Mike Henson's group (UMass Chemical Engineering) works on modeling of complex dynamical systems including microbial cell populations and avacular tumors.
Hava Siegelmann
Hava Siegelmann (UMass Computer Science) simulates circadian oscillators by dynamic gene networks and collaborates on computational neurobiology.
Biomolecular Dynamics and Engineering Lab
Moon Kim's group (UMass Mechanical and Industrial Engineering) works on protein folding and dynamics.
Illeana Streinu
Illeana Steinu is a computational geometer at Smith who is working on protein folding.
Erin Conlon
Erin Conlon (UMass Math & Statistics) works on microarray analysis methods.
Application Groups
These research groups are usually biology labs with a strong bioinformatics component.
Geobacter Project
The Geobacter project in Derek Lovley's lab (UMass Microbiology) is working on computational models of the Geobacter metabolism. Bioinformatics activities include genome assembly, annotation, and functional predictions from microarray expression experiments.
Blanchard Research Group
Jeff Blanchard (UMass Microbiology) uses systems-level approaches to understand bacterial stress response networks related to host-pathogen interactions and the influence of global climate change on populations of marine cyanobacteria and communities of bacteria. Genome sequences and microarray data are important data sources.
Gierasch Research Group
Lila Gierasch group in (UMass Biochemistry) studies how amino acid sequence determines the three-dimensional structure of a protein. This problem is addressed in the laboratory through the study of how conformational preferences of model peptides guides folding. Detailed studies of in vitro folding of a predominantly b-sheet protein with a very simple topology are also carried out. Methods of use in all of the folding work include circular dichroism, fluorescence, and nuclear magnetic resonance.
Martz Group