Is any MS work planned for the near or later future ?

Message boards : Rosetta@home Science : Is any MS work planned for the near or later future ?

To post messages, you must log in.

AuthorMessage
nozi

Send message
Joined: 15 Nov 05
Posts: 11
Credit: 566,793
RAC: 141
Message 9902 - Posted: 26 Jan 2006, 7:52:38 UTC

This would be especially interesting because the only project concerning MS-Work was FAD , where i recently came from ( all available work was done )
To understand my "special interest" - i want to work for a cure for the desease i and many people i know suffer of. No matter if i can benefit of the science or not . I think 4 million reasons are enough with numbers rising.
Communication Basic No.1 :

Freedom is always the Freedom to dissent.
ID: 9902 · Rating: 0 · rate: Rate + / Rate - Report as offensive    Reply Quote
Profile dcdc

Send message
Joined: 3 Nov 05
Posts: 1831
Credit: 119,627,225
RAC: 11,586
Message 9937 - Posted: 26 Jan 2006, 15:43:35 UTC

hi nozi!

I don't know if there is any work directly linked to MS here, but understanding and being able to accurately model protein folding will definitely be beneficial to MS research in the (hopefully not-too-distant) future.

HTH
Danny
ID: 9937 · Rating: 0 · rate: Rate + / Rate - Report as offensive    Reply Quote
Profile River~~
Avatar

Send message
Joined: 15 Dec 05
Posts: 761
Credit: 285,578
RAC: 0
Message 9957 - Posted: 26 Jan 2006, 19:39:35 UTC

4 million. Is that in the US or globally?

Either way it is a convincing argument...
ID: 9957 · Rating: 0 · rate: Rate + / Rate - Report as offensive    Reply Quote
Profile dcdc

Send message
Joined: 3 Nov 05
Posts: 1831
Credit: 119,627,225
RAC: 11,586
Message 9972 - Posted: 26 Jan 2006, 23:25:13 UTC - in response to Message 9957.  
Last modified: 26 Jan 2006, 23:26:17 UTC

4 million. Is that in the US or globally?

Either way it is a convincing argument...


nozi's in Germany so it's unlikely to be a US stat ;)

I've just had a look and see an estimate of 85k sufferers in the UK which is ~1% of the world population, so if it scales uniformly, that's around 85 million worldwide (probably less because of UK demographics though).

[edit] Just had another look and it doens't scale uniformly! 3-4 million worldwide ;)
ID: 9972 · Rating: 0 · rate: Rate + / Rate - Report as offensive    Reply Quote
BennyRop

Send message
Joined: 17 Dec 05
Posts: 555
Credit: 140,800
RAC: 0
Message 10000 - Posted: 27 Jan 2006, 7:49:06 UTC

As was pointed out in the thread about diabetes - the Rosetta project is working at improving the Rosetta client. It will then be able to be used by other projects to target specific problems.

If the client is improved enough, then it will get put to use to help find cures (just like we did over at FaD.)

http://www.chips.navy.mil/archives/03_spring/PDF/HPCMP.pdf
shows The High Performance Computing Modernization Program for the various branches of the military was used to "screen 2.5 million chemical structures using a specially designed algorithm. They identified 20 high potential inhibitors of Botulinum toxin sero-type A. They have since synthesized 3 of these materials in wet laboratories and initial tests indicate that all three are effective inhibitors."

This is posted as proof that the process works; that someone's algorithm was being used by Dr. Panchal and associates to do the screening; and that in the future we should see the various screening programs currently out there being put to use not just by the DC folks like us, but by private/government agencies as well.

ID: 10000 · Rating: 0 · rate: Rate + / Rate - Report as offensive    Reply Quote
Profile River~~
Avatar

Send message
Joined: 15 Dec 05
Posts: 761
Credit: 285,578
RAC: 0
Message 10129 - Posted: 28 Jan 2006, 19:18:20 UTC - in response to Message 10000.  

congrats on posting the 10,000th message on these boards!
ID: 10129 · Rating: 0 · rate: Rate + / Rate - Report as offensive    Reply Quote

Message boards : Rosetta@home Science : Is any MS work planned for the near or later future ?



©2024 University of Washington
https://www.bakerlab.org