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faculty
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Heather
A. Carlson
Associate
Professor of Chemistry
John G. Searle Assistant Professor of Medicinal Chemistry (College
of Pharmacy)
Ph.D., Yale University
Computational Chemistry, Theoretical Biophysics
Phone: (734) 615-6841
E-mail: carlsonh@umich.edu
Group
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In
my research, quantum mechanics, statistical mechanics,
molecular mechanics, and database mining techniques
are used to investigate chemical and enzymatic
systems of biomedical importance. Structure-function
relationships and > enzymatic regulation often
result from subtle details at the atomic level;
this detail is beyond the scope of current experimental
methods for biological systems. Understanding
enzymatic control allows us to explain the mechanism
of disease and suggest routes for inhibition.
Our research focuses primarily on protein-ligand
recognition, protein flexibility, and new methods
for computer-aided drug discovery.
One
of the major projects in my lab is the development
of a method for incorporating protein flexibility
into the drug design process. A particular breakthrough
with this method is that unbound, apo protein
structures can be successfully used in drug design.
If the community does not need to wait for ligand-bound
crystal structures, we can tackle important systems
years earlier than previously possible.
The
other major project in the lab is the continued
curration of the largest database of protein-ligand
complexes: Binding MOAD (Mother of All Databases).
This dataset continues to grow with the PDB.
It is available online, and we continue to develop
web-based tools that allow other users to pull
information from our dataset. The patterns within
this dataset allow us to better understand the
molecular recognition behind ligand-binding events.
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AWARDS
- Wiley International
Journal of Quantum Chemistry Young Investigator
Award (2006)
- College of Pharmacy's
Student Appreciation Award for Excellence in
Teaching (2005)
- National Science Foundation
Career Award for 2005
- 2002
Beckman Young Investigator Award
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REPRESENTATIVE PUBLICATIONS
- Liegi
Hu, Mark L. Benson, Richard D. Smith, Michael
G. Lerner, and Heather A. Carlson. Binding
MOAD (Mother of All Databases). Prot. Struct.
Func. Bioinformatics, submitted.
- KL
Meagher, HA Carlson. Incorporating protein
flexibility in structure-based drug discovery:
Using HIV-1 protease as a test case. J.
Am. Chem. Soc. 2004, 126,
13276-13281. (Highlighted in Nature Rev
Drug Discovery)
- H
Zhong, HA Carlson. Computational Studies and
Peptidomimetic Design for the Human p53-MDM2
Complex. Prot. Struct. Func. Bioinformatics 2005, 58,
222-234.
- KL
Meagher, HA Carlson. Solvation influences flap
collapse in HIV-1 protease. Prot.
Struct. Func. Bioinformatics 2005, 58,
119-125.
- HA
Carlson. Protein flexibility and drug discovery:
How to hit a moving target. Curr. Opin.
Chem. Biol. 2002, 6, 447-452.
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