
Photo: Junior Luisirene Hern谩ndez and Professor Marco Ceruso review computer-generated protein structural transition simulations.
One of 13 Minority Students to Present Poster at Biophysical Society Annual Meeting in San Francisco
Luisirene Hern谩ndez, a junior majoring in biochemistry at T九色视频 (CCNY), is one of 13 students nationwide selected to receive a Minority Travel Award to attend the Biophysical Society鈥檚 54th Annual Meeting in San Francisco. During the meeting, February 20 鈥 24, she will present a poster 鈥淥btaining Functionally Relevant Protein Structural Transitions Using a Combined Physics/Structure-Based Coarse Grained Model,鈥 and be honored at a reception February 20.
Working in the lab of Dr. , Assistant Professor of Chemistry, Ms. Hern谩ndez investigated the conditions under which a computer simulation technique called ELNEDIN could more readily identify functionally relevant directions of conformational change in large protein structures.
ELNEDIN, which was developed by Professor Ceruso and colleagues in the the Netherlands, combines an elastic network with a physics-based coarse-grained force field. She also investigated how modifying the topology of the elastic network affects the dynamic behavior of ELNEDIN models.
The thrust of the research is to study how well conformational changes associated with the function of proteins can be reproduced, Professor Ceruso explained. Noting that coarse-grained models have limitations, he pointed out that 鈥淟uisirene鈥檚 research tries to understand the comfort zone within which the models can predict these changes reliably.鈥
Ms. Hern谩ndez, who was born in New York and attended high school in the Dominican Republic, said she joined Professor Ceruso鈥檚 lab two years ago because his research was 鈥渄ifferent from what everyone else was doing.鈥 The lab develops new tools for accurately modeling and simulating very large macromolecular assemblies in realistic environments. Its current focus is on developing coarse-grained models for various bio-molecules including sugars, proteins and DNA.
In addition to her work in Professor Ceruso鈥檚 lab, Ms. Hern谩ndez, who has a 3.7 G.P.A., participates in CCNY鈥檚 (City College Academy for Professional Preparation) and (Minority Access and Research Career/Research Initiative for Scientific Enhancement) programs. After graduation, her goal is to pursue a Ph.D. in neuroscience.
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Ellis Simon
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