Professor Michael Zuker and Chip Lawrence
View of RPI Campus
Mandelbrot Set
NOS Molecule
i-sites plot
i-sites graph
Folding of RNA Molecule
RPI Home Page  
The Bioinformatics Center at Rensselaer and Wadsworth
click to search  click to email this page to your colleague


home
applications
research
education
sponsors

search
aboutUs

 

 

Members of BiC   

Members of the Bioinformatics Center at RPI and Wadsworth are distinguished scientists in the field of Bioinformatics. Here are short biographical and research interests sketches with links to detailed biographical and publications information for each member.

Professor Michael Zuker

Professor Michael Zuker
Current Position: Professor of Mathematical Sciences, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.

Research interests: The central theme in Dr. Zuker's research has been the development of algorithms to predict RNA and DNA secondary structure by free energy minimization using empirically derived thermodynamic parameters. >> More

  arrow down Prof. Zuker
arrow down Prof. Lawrence
arrow down Dr. Mannella
arrow down Prof. Bennett
arrow down Prof. Breneman
arrow down Prof. Bystroff
arrow down Dr. Ding
arrow down Prof. Embrechts
arrow down Prof. Garde
arrow down Dr. Lee Ann McCue
arrow down Prof. Newberg
arrow down Prof. Salerno
arrow down Prof. Wentland
arrow down Prof. Zaki

Future research: 1. The development of algorithms for the interactions of more than one molecule of DNA or RNA will remain a high priority. 2. Dr. Zuker is interested in developing methods to find non-coding RNA (ncRNA) in large tracts of DNA. In addition, the computation of common secondary structures for homologous RNAs remains a challenge.

Education: Professor Zuker received his Ph.D. in Mathematics from Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1974.

Publications Related to Bioinformatics arrow up top          

Professor Chip Lawrence

Professor Chip Lawrence

Current Position: Chief of the Biometrics/Bioinformatics Laboratory, Wadsworth Center.

Research interests: Statistical bioinformatics is Prof. Lawrence's laboratory area of expertise. His research focuses on studies of transcription regulation using Bayesian statistical methods >> more

Education: Prof. Lawrence received his Ph.D. in Applied Operations Research & Statistics from Cornell University in 1971.

Publications Related to Bioinformatics arrow up top          

Dr. Carmen Mannella Dr. Carmen Mannella

Current Position: Executive Director of the joint Wadsworth/RPI Center for Bioinformatics. He is also Director of Wadsworth's Division of Molecular Medicine, and a professor and past chair of the Department of Biomedical Sciences of the School of Public Health, University at Albany.

Research interests: Dr. Mannella's main research interest is understanding how shape, particularly membrane topology, influences biological function. >> more

Involvement in teaching and student education: While at Wadsworth, Dr. Mannella has been involved in several educational and outreach programs. In particular, he established in 1991 a popular 10-week summer training program for undergraduates, with funding from the National Science Foundation. >> More

Education: Dr. Mannella received a doctorate in Biophysics at the University of Pennsylvania and was a National Cancer Institute postdoctoral fellow at Roswell Park Cancer Institute.

Publications Related to Bioinformatics arrow up top          

Professor Kristin P.  Bennett

Professor Kristin P. Bennett

Current Position: Associate Professor, Department of Mathematical Sciences, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.

Research interests: The research of Professor Bennett centers on combining operations research and artificial intelligence problem solving methods. She uses mathematical programming approaches to problems in artificial intelligence such as machine learning, neural networks, pattern recognition, and planning. She applies these techniques to medical, financial and scientific problems. While adapting algorithms for parallel machines, she uses mathematical programming approaches to other areas in computer sciences such as genetic algorithms and database query optimization.

Education: Professor Bennett received her Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin—Madison in 1993 .

Publications Related to Bioinformatics arrow up top          

Professor Curt M. Breneman

Professor Curt M. Breneman

Current Position: Professor of Chemistry, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.

Research interests: 1) The Automated Design and Discovery of Novel Pharmaceuticals using Semi-Supervised Learning in Large Molecular Databases
2) Ab Initio Computational Chemistry
3) Rapid Construction of Molecular Electron Density Distributions: Transferable Atom Equivalent (TAE) Modeling
4) Electron Density-Based QSAR and QSPR Descriptor Computation
5) Automated Drug Discovery Methods and "Materials by Design"
6) Molecular Recognition
7) Fuzzy Bar Code representations of DNA-protein interactions. View abstract (opens new window).

Education: Prof. Breneman received his Ph.D. in organic chemistry from the University of California at Santa Barbara in 1987.

Publications Related to Bioinformatics arrow up top          

Professor Chris Bystroff

Professor Chris Bystroff

Current Position: Assistant Professor of Biology, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.

Research interests: Prof. Bystroff's research addresses the protein folding problem, specifically the nature of the folding pathway. Algorithms for protein structure prediction are seen as models for the physical folding process. >>More

Future research: Understanding folding pathways may lead to an understanding of why some proteins misfold to form amyloid and others require molecular chapaerones for folding. Late folding intermediate states might identify highly antigenic sites on the protein surface. Alignments of three-dimensional structures without regard to permutations in the sequence order can be used to develop a new type of hidden Markov model, which may be able to detect very remote homologous relationships between sequences.

Involvement in teaching and student education: Prof. Bystroff teaches courses in Sequence Analysis, Molecular Modeling, and X-ray Crystallography

Education: Prof. Bystroff received his B.A. at Carleton College in 1983, and Ph.D. at University of California at San Diego in 1988.

Publications Related to Bioinformatics arrow up top          

Dr. Ye Ding

Dr. Ye Ding

Current Position: Research Scientist at Bioinformatics lab of the Wadsworth Center.

Research interests: Dr. Ding's research is focused on novel statistical algorithms for RNA secondary structure prediction and rational design of RNA-targeting nucleic acids for gene down-regulation. >> More

Future research: Dr. Ding's future research directions include:
1) prediction of target sites for microRNAs (natural regulatory antisense RNAs);
2) application of RNA-targeting nucleic acids design to infectious pathogens;
3) statistical algorithms for RNA pseudoknot prediction;
4) statistical prediction of common structures of homologous RNA sequences;
5) development of statistical models for the prediction of small regulatory RNAs in eukaryotic genomes;

6) rational design tools for molecular beacons and developement of a module Sprobe for Sfold.

Education: Dr. Ye Ding received his Ph.D. in Statistics from Carnegie Mellon University in 1990.

Publications Related to Bioinformatics arrow up top          

Professor Mark Embrechts Professor Mark Embrechts

Current Position: Assistant Professor of Chemistry, RPI

Research interests: Prof. Embrecht's areas of interest relate to data mining, soft computing, computational intelligence, and neural networks. He is a member of IEEE, ANS and is past Chapter President of the American Nuclear Society

Education: Professor Embrechts received his Ph.D. from Virginia Polytechnic Institute in 1981

Publications Related to Bioinformatics arrow up top          

Professor Shekhar Garde Professor Shekhar Garde

Current Position: Assistant Professor of Chemistry, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.

Research interests: molecular thermodynamics and simulations of biological systems, statistical mechanics of liquids and polymers, and solvation phenomena -- especially in aqueous solutions (water structure, hydrophobic interactions). Professor Grarde focuses on understanding and modeling the role of water structure in inducing interactions between various hydrophobic, polar, and ionic molecules which ultimately leads to many important self-assembly processes in water.

Education: Professor Garde received his Ph.D. from University of Delaware in 1997.

Publications Related to Bioinformatics arrow up top          

Dr. Lee Ann McCue

Dr. Lee Ann McCue

Current Position: Research Scientist, Bioinformatics Lab, Wadsworth Center.

Research interests: The research of Dr. McCue focuses on transcription regulation in prokaryotes, using bioinformatics and comparative genomics approaches to study regulatory networks at the whole-genome scale. Her research involves identifying the cis-acting regulatory signals in prokaryotic promoters and working to understand how trans-acting transcription factors specifically recognize and interact with their cognate sites. Current projects include: 1) the de novo prediction of cis-regulatory sites on the genome scale for Escherichia coli K12, Synechocystis PCC6803, Shewanella oneidensis, Yersinia pestis, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa by comparative genomics; >> More

Education: Dr. McCue received her Ph.D. in Microbiology from The Ohio State University in 1994.

Publications Related to Bioinformatics arrow up top          

Professor Lee Newberg

Current Position: Joint appointment as a Research Scientist in the Bioinformatics Laboratory, Wadsworth Center and as a Research Associate Professor in the Rensselaer Computer Science Department.

Research interests: Algorithmic, statistical, and mathematical combinatorics approaches to computational molecular biology. In particular, using multiple species and phylogenetic relationships, to enhance algorithms for locating transcription factor binding sites; relevant to the regulation of gene expression.

Short biography: Prof. Lee Newberg worked in computational biology as an undergraduate with Eric Lander (Whitehead Institute, MIT) and as a graduate student with Richard Karp (University of California, Berkeley) producing several useful algorithms and mathematical results suitable for publication. >> More

Education: Prof. Lee Newberg received his B.S. degrees in Mathematics and Physics from MIT in 1986 and his Ph.D. degree in Computer Science from The University of California at Berkeley in 1993.

Publications Related to Bioinformatics arrow up top          

Professor John Salerno Professor John Salerno

Current Position:Professor of Biology, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.

Research interests: Structure, Function and Control of Nitric Oxide Synthases; P450 superfamily enzymes Structure and Function in small heat shock protein superfamily Bioinformatics, structural modeling, protein design and directed evolution.

Courses: Bioinformatics II: Molecular Modeling (Spring 2003)

Education: Professor Salerno received his Bachelor degree in Physics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1972 and his Ph.D. in Biophysics from the University of Pennsylvania, School of Medicine in 1977.

List of current publications arrow up top          

Professor Mark Wentland Professor Mark Wentland

Current Position: Professor of Chemistry, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.

Research interests: In collaboration with Dr. Jean M. Bidlack and coworkers at the University of Rochester and with funding from the National Institute on Drug Abuse, the main goal of Professor Wentland's research is to design and synthesize potential medications to treat cocaine and heroin abuse in humans.>> More

Short biography: Mark Wentland began his 33 year career in drug design and discovery in 1970 when he joined the medicinal chemistry department at Sterling Winthrop Inc. Prior to this he was at Rice University where he earned his Ph.D. in synthetic organic chemistry under the direction of the late Professor Robert V. Stevens. During his 24 years at Sterling Winthrop, he held various positions of scientific and administrative responsibility... >> more

Courses: Drug Discovery (CHEM-4330, 6330) and Medicinal Chemistry (CHEM-4300, 6300). >> short description

Education: Professor Wentland received his Ph.D. degree in chemistry from Rice University, Houston, TX, in 1970.

Publications Related to Drug Design and Discovery arrow up top          

Professor Mohammed J. Zaki

Professor Mohammed J. Zaki

Current Position: Assistant Professor of Computer Science, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.

Research interests: the design of efficient, scalable, and parallel algorithms for various data mining techniques. Professor Zaki is specially interested in developing novel data mining techniques for bioinformatics. >> More

Future research: to address other important problems in bioinformatics, namely, multiple sequence alignment via sequence mining techniques, gene mapping ... >> more

Courses: Bioinformatics: Algorithms and Systems (Spring 2003)

Education: Professor Zaki received his Ph.D. degree in computer science from the University of Rochester in 1998.

Publications Related to Bioinformatics arrow up top          

 

 

 
 

  

 

 

About Us | Contact | Comments | Old Site | RPI Home

Copyright © 2001-2003 The Bioinformatics Center at RPI and Wadsworth. All rights reserved.