More about HKUST
Molecular Structure Elucidation from 3D Electron Microscopy
Speaker: Professor Chandrajit BAJAJ Center for Computational Visualization Department of Computer Sciences Institute for Computational Engineering and Sciences University of Texas at Austin Title: "Molecular Structure Elucidation from 3D Electron Microscopy" Date: Tuesday, 24 March, 2009 Time: 2:00pm - 3:00pm Venue: Lecture Theatre G (Chow Tak Sin Lecture Theatre, near lifts 25/26) HKUST Abstract: With continued advances in three dimensional Electron Microscopy (3D EM) one is progressively able to elucidate the structural building blocks of proteins (and nucleic acids) at varying resolutions. In this talk, I shall discuss algorithms to detect the secondary structural motifs (helices and sheets) from proteins for which the volumetric 3D EM maps are reconstructed at 5-10 Angstrom resolution. Additionally, I shall also show that when the resolution is coarser than 10 Angstrom, some of the tertiary structural molecular motifs can be elucidated from 3D EM. For each of these algorithms, we employ techniques from computational geometry and differential topology, especially the computation of stable/unstable manifolds of certain critical points of distance functions of molecular surface boundaries. ***************** Biography: Chandrajit L. Bajaj is the director of the Center for Computational Visualization, in the Institute for Computational and Engineering Sciences (ICES) and a Professor of Computer Sciences at the University of Texas at Austin. Bajaj holds the Computational Applied Mathematics Chair in Visualization. He is also an affiliate faculty member of Mathematics, Electrical Engineering, Bio-Medical Engineering, and also a member of the Institutes of Cell and Molecular Biology, and Neurosciences, the Center for Learning and Memory, and the Center for Perceptual Systems. He is an author and editor of over 300 publications, including 225 papers, 25 book chapters, and 1 book and 3 edited volurmes. He is on the editorial boards for the International Journal of Computational Geometry and Applications, the ACM Transactions on Graphics, the ACM Computing Surveys, the SIAM Journal on Imaging Studies, and the International Journal for Computational Vision and Biomechanics. He is on numerous national and international conference committees, and has served as a scientific consultant to national labs and industry. He is also a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS).