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Featured Events

BioMaPS Seminar Series - Upcoming Seminars

 

Special Seminar

November 12: Tai-Sung Lee - University of Minnesota

"Integrating Bioinformatics, Molecular Simulation and Quantum Chemistry to Explore Cancer Signal Transduction and Ribozyme Catalysis"

 

Special Seminar

November 13: Sheena Radford, University of Leeds, England

"Towards Structural Elucidation of the Self-Assembly Mechanism of Beta-2-Microglobulin into Amyloid Fibrils"

 

November 18: Uwe Ohler - Duke University

"Regulatory Genomics of Transcription Control in D Melanogaster"

 

Special Seminar

December 1: Eugene Shakhnovich - Harvard University

"Evolution of Protein Structure and Function: from Atoms to Organisms"

Seminar co-sponsored by the Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology and the BioMaPS Institute

 

                                               Biological Physics Seminar Series ~ Student Seminar Series

 

Biological Physics Seminar Series: December 11, 2009 - Gurinder Singh "Mickey" Atwal, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

"TBA"

Student Seminar Series: November 19, 2009 - Julia Tsitron - Alexandre Morozov's Group

"Chemical Sensing:  Biophysical Modeling and Bayesian Analysis Provide Insights into Combinatorial Strategy of Olfaction"

Student Seminar Series: December 3, 2009 - Erhan Bilal - Gyan Bhanot's Group

"TBA"

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Welcome to the BioMaPS Institute for Quantitative Biology at Rutgers University

 

The BioMaPS Institute for Quantitative Biology provides support for research and graduate education in biology at the interface with the mathematical and physical sciences; facilitates interactions among experimentalists and theoreticians working on problems in molecular biophysics, computational and systems biology; and provides training for a new generation of scientists using the latest computational and modeling tools. The Institute is the home and provides oversight of the Graduate Program in Computational Biology and Molecular Biophysics.

 

Research at the BioMaPS Institute combines molecular level details and biophysical modeling with statistical and bioinformatics tools to provide a multi-scale view of complex biological systems. Current foci of collaborative research at the Institute include: transcriptional regulation of gene expression; modeling of biological pathways and interaction networks; proteomics; structure-based drug and vaccine design; and development of computational and statistical methods for the classification of cancer patients. Additional research problems are described on the individual Institute faculty web pages.

 

Students completing the interdisciplinary Graduate Program in Computational Biology and Molecular Biophysics are awarded the Ph.D.-degree. Courses and dissertation research are focused on the concepts and techniques of molecular and structural biology; bioinformatics and computational biology; statistical physics and mathematical modeling. In addition, the program provides the necessary infrastructure (courses and faculty) for students enrolled in the Molecular Biosciences umbrella program at Rutgers who wish to specialize in computational and structural biology.