Sculpting protein conformations
From Proteopedia
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Planned contents include PyMOL, Samson, and (now defunct) Sculpt. These programs enable protein conformations to be "sculpted" by dragging with the mouse. | Planned contents include PyMOL, Samson, and (now defunct) Sculpt. These programs enable protein conformations to be "sculpted" by dragging with the mouse. | ||
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+ | ==Related Resources== | ||
+ | * ''Sculpt''<ref name="sculpt">PMID:8003957</ref>, a program initially released in 1994 by Mark Surles, Jane Richardson, David Richardson, and Frederick P. Brooks, Jr., is described with the theoretical structure [[1ssr]]. | ||
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+ | ==References== | ||
+ | <references /> |
Revision as of 17:13, 29 February 2020
This page is under development starting February 29, 2020. Please come back later to see it more fully developed. |
Planned contents include PyMOL, Samson, and (now defunct) Sculpt. These programs enable protein conformations to be "sculpted" by dragging with the mouse.
Related Resources
- Sculpt[1], a program initially released in 1994 by Mark Surles, Jane Richardson, David Richardson, and Frederick P. Brooks, Jr., is described with the theoretical structure 1ssr.