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Vision cover: UM confronts ticking clock of climate change

2007

MESSAGE FROM THE VICE PRESIDENT
UM research has evolved to prepare a better future for all.

QUICK LOOKS
A rundown of science stories from the past year.

WARM NEW WORLD
Efforts by the University to understand and adapt to climate change.

Sidebar: Are oceans becoming acidic?

LANGUAGE 911
UM faculty members strive to save fading indigenous tongues.

THE BEACH BUILDERS
UM helps repair the shores of Montana's largest natural freshwater lake.

THE LOST LEWIS AND CLARK
Professor rediscovers explorers forgotten by history.

BIRDS AS BAROMETERS
UM center uses feathered friends to help monitor the environment.

A GROWING MYSTERY
Ecologist studies why all plants don't flower and seed every year.

STUDENT SCIENTIST
Hawaii becomes a young researcher's classroom.

INVITING DISCOVERY
Some of UM's most engaging research takes place in two centers of the University's College of Health Professions and Biomedical Sciences.

Sidebar: Neurons get their close-up

Sidebar: Core facility models molecules

UNDERSTANDING A HAZARDOUS WORLD
Center studies environmental impacts on human health

Sidebar: Useful tools: toxic agents and air pollution

Sidebar: Genes, the environment and you

 

ARCHIVE
2006
2005
2004
2003
2002
2001
2000

 

Cover: An illustration of UM's Main Hall tower bathed in the glow of a fictitious smoldering Earth.

 

Vision is published annually by The University of Montana Office of the Vice President for Research and Development and University Relations. It is printed by UM Printing & Graphic Services.

PUBLISHER: Daniel J. Dwyer. MANAGING EDITOR AND GRAPHIC DESIGNER: Cary Shimek. PHOTOGRAPHER: Todd Goodrich. CONTRIBUTING EDITORS: Brianne Burrowes, Brenda Day, Judy Fredenberg, Joan Melcher, Rita Munzenrider, Patia Stephens and Alex Strickland. WEB DESIGN: Patia Stephens. EDITORIAL OFFICE: University Relations, Brantly Hall 330, Missoula, MT 59812, 406-243-5914. MANAGEMENT: Judy Fredenberg, Office of the Vice President for Research and Development, 116 Main Hall, Missoula, MT 59812, 406-243-6670.

 

 

 

 

Core facility models molecules

A powerful tool in the arsenal of UM’s neuroscience center is its Molecular Computational Core Facility.

This high-tech computing environment, whose hardware is housed on the fourth floor of the 2007 addition to the Skaggs Building, allows researchers to visualize the drug molecules and proteins they work with in 3-D space. They can even use special glasses and displays to reach out and manipulate their constructs in something bordering on virtual reality.

Like many UM scientists, chemist Sean Esslinger links directly to the computing facility from his Skaggs Building office. He says the facility can be essential in helping him design new molecules.

“It can take months to design a molecule in the lab,” Esslinger says. “If you are trying to create a molecule to interact with a particular protein, if it doesn’t line up on the computers, chances are it’s not going to work. So this computational modeling can save you a lot of time.”

Associate Professor John Gerdes says allowing computers to model proteins and their binding sites is a great advantage for drug design and discovery. He says the facility allows scientists to see if molecules and proteins dock together well and then view this interaction from all angles. If something isn’t working, models may suggest areas to improve or pieces that need to be added.

Professor Chuck Thompson says, “It’s sort of like playing with Legos. The computer can look at molecules that exhibit the activity and behaviors you want, coalesce all the good pieces you want and maybe indicate where the bad pieces might be. This often gets you pointed in the right direction.”

 

 

John Gerdes and Harold Cox at computer
Molecule mission command: MCCF Director John Gerdes (left) and computer consultant Harold Cox hard at work

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Molecule
An image of a docked ligand molecule created in the computational core facility

 

Cary Shimek, Managing Editor
Judy Fredenberg, Office of the Vice President for Research and Development
The University of Montana-Missoula
32 Campus Drive | Missoula, MT 59812
phone 406-243-2522 | fax 406-243-4520
Copyright 2007 The University of Montana

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