Structural Bioinformatics
Project description
There are now 200 million protein sequences in UniProt, but for the majority of these nothing is known about their overall behaviour in terms of conformation and dynamics. A large proportion this ‘dark proteome’ likely exhibits ambiguous conformational behaviour that defies the traditional ‘one- protein-one-fold’ paradigm. In our lab (http://bio2byte.be/), we are creating a framework of protein sequence-based predictions, and the interpretation thereof, to obtain a more generally applicable, probabilistic view of protein behaviour. From core predictions of conformation and dynamics1,2 , we assess early folding3-5 and other characteristics such as disorder6 and aggregation7 . The resulting biophysical view of a sequence can help in pairwise sequence alignment8 or global homology assessment9 , without using evolutionary information, which is biased towards folded proteins10 . We apply our computational methods in collaboration, both with computational groups, for example in relation to post-translational modifications (PTMs) (https://iomics.ugent.be/scop3p/), and with experimental groups, for example, in protein design to create RNA recognition motif domains (RRMs) for specific RNA binding (http://rnact.eu/).
We are looking for postdoctoral researchers with excellent programming and computer science skills, preferably in Python and with a structural bioinformatics background. It is important that you can show evidence of your research from peer-reviewed publications in international scientific journals, and that you have strong communication skills in English, as the group is very international. In this position, you would help further the framework, for example by i) predicting the effect of PTMs on protein biophysics, ii) connecting biophysical characteristics of proteins to their subcellular location, or iii) creating tools to use the biophysical space of proteins to improve protein (re-)design. This work will then be collaboratively applied in broader computational and/or experimental settings.
About the research Group
Bio2Byte Research Group
The Bio2Byte group is lead by Prof. Dr. Wim Vranken and researchers the relation between protein sequence and biophysical behavior.
The Bio2Byte group is primarily situated at the Interuniversity Institute of Bioinformatics in Brussels, a collaborative interfaculty institute between the Vrije Universiteit Brussel and the Université Libre de Bruxelles. It is located at the the ULB side of the Pleinlaan/La Plaine campus on the 6th floor of the C building.
At the VUB, the group is linked to Structural Biology Brussels at the Bioengineering sciences department, as well as the departments of Computer Science and Chemistry at the Faculty of Sciences, plus to the Biomedical sciences at the Faculty of Medicine and Pharmacy.