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faculty
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Ioan
Andricioaei Assistant
Professor of Chemistry and Assistant Research
Professor in Bioinformatics
Ph.D., Boston University; Postdoctoral, Harvard University
Physical/ChemBio
Phone: (734) 763-8013
E-mail: andricio@umich.edu
Research
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Our
research explores theoretical and computational
topics at the interface between structural molecular
biology and physical chemistry. It hinges on the
central theme of developing and applying computer
and modeling methods to describe, in terms of dynamics
and thermodynamics, biologically important molecular
processes, with the aim to complement, enhance
or predict experimental findings. Research directions
include:
Computer
Simulations of DNA-Binding Machines. Protein-DNA
interactions are essential in such crucial cellular
functions as replication, repair, transcription
or recombination. Many enzymes at and ahead of
the replication fork affect large DNA fragments.
For instance, topoisomerases undo DNA knotting.
Others, like helicases and polymerases, are biomolecular
motors: they use the energy of binding and/or hydrolysis
of nucleotides to do mechanical work on the DNA
fragments to which they bind. We have an avid interest
in the theoretical description of these fundamental
genetic processes through massively parallel computer
simulations.
Dynamics-Function
Relationships. Connections to NMR Relaxation.
An accurate measure of free energy, important for
protein/RNA stability or ligand binding, has to
include the entropy manifested in molecular flexibility.
On the experimental side, this dynamic aspect is
brought in by developments in solution NMR spectroscopy,
which measures motion by relaxation experiments.
Molecular dynamics simulation is an important tool
to complement these measurements and to connect
dynamics to entropy.
Enhanced
Sampling in Path Space. Many important equilibrium
and kinetic properties of chemical systems (including
proteins and nucleic acids) can be cast in terms
of paths in multi-dimensional spaces. Sampling
and optimization algorithms we have developed
for the conformational space can be generalized
and adapted to the space of paths. We see fertile
ground for theoretical and computational work
on several categories of paths, from chemical-reaction
paths to paths in the sequence space of evolving
proteins.
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AWARDS
- National Science Foundation
Career Award (2006)
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REPRESENTATIVE PUBLICATIONS
- J. Wereszczynski and I. Andricioaei, “On structural transitions, thermodynamic equilibrium and the phase diagram of DNA and RNA duplexes under external tension and torque,” PNAS, 103, 16200-16205 (2006)
- P. Tian and I. Andricioaei, "Size, motion and function of the SecY translocon revealed by molecular dynamics simulations with virtual probes," Biophys. J. 90, 2718-2730 (2006).
- C. Xing and I. Andricioaei, "On the calculation of time-correlation functions by potential scaling,"
J. Chem. Phys. 124, 034110 (2006)
- L. Sari and I. Andricioaei, “Rotation of DNA around intact strand in human topoisomerase I implies distinct mechanisms for positive and negative supercoil relaxation,” Nucleic Acids Research 33, 6621-6634 (2005).
- J. MacFadyen and I. Andricioaei, “A skewed-momenta method to efficiently generate conformational transition trajectories,” J. Chem. Phys. 123, 074107 (2005)
- P. Tian and I. Andricioaei, “Repetitive pulling catalyzes co-translocational unfolding of barnase during import through a mitochondrial pore” J. Mol. Biol., 350 1017-1034 (2005).
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