Use Proteopedia to advance your scientific career

From Proteopedia

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(Create customized molecular scenes with surprising ease)
(Create customized molecular scenes with surprising ease)
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==Create customized molecular scenes with surprising ease==
==Create customized molecular scenes with surprising ease==
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See the section "Want To Contribute?" at the [[Main Page]].
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To get started, see the section "Want To Contribute?" at the [[Main Page]].
Examples of well-developed pages with many customized molecular scenes:
Examples of well-developed pages with many customized molecular scenes:
*[[Avian Influenza Neuraminidase, Tamiflu and Relenza]]
*[[Avian Influenza Neuraminidase, Tamiflu and Relenza]]
*[[Lac repressor]]
*[[Lac repressor]]
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*[[Gramicidin Channel in Lipid Bilayer]]
==Share your molecular scenes with colleagues around the world==
==Share your molecular scenes with colleagues around the world==

Revision as of 19:59, 21 July 2015

This page presents some ideas on how to use Proteopedia to advance your scientific career.

Contents

Create customized molecular scenes with surprising ease

To get started, see the section "Want To Contribute?" at the Main Page.

Examples of well-developed pages with many customized molecular scenes:

Share your molecular scenes with colleagues around the world

Enhance your Thesis or publications with live interactive 3D Complements

Explain structure-function relationships with unequalled clarity

  • The helical nature of some molecules, the direction of helices, the difference between right- and left-handed, are more easily grasped thanks to an interactive structure.
  • Illustrate any protein your are talking about with not just a simplistic geometric cartoon, but with its real shape and volume.
  • Explaining specificity of a protein for binding a ligand is easier when you can show the pocket, the contacts, the distances between key atoms.
  • Explaining that a protein changes conformation upon ligand binding: a description that needs understanding what conformation means, and imagination of what is the change involved, but you can just display the animation of such change.

Enhance your teaching with interactive 3D molecular scenes

Share your expertise in articles that invite collaborative contributions from others

Build a presence in the scientific media

Well-developed Proteopedia articles receive a DOI and become citable publications

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

Eric Martz, Jaime Prilusky

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