Zhou Biophysics Group at FSU
The Zhou group carries out theoretical, computational, and experimental studies on the structure, dynamics, and function of proteins. Four main directions are: (1) kinetics and mechanisms of protein association; (2) crowding and emergent properties in cellular environments; (3) structure and function of ion channels and other membrane proteins; and (4) structures and mechanisms of peptide self-assembly.
"HOT" PUBLICATIONS
J. Guo and H.-X. Zhou (2016). Protein allostery and conformational dynamics. Chem. Rev. (in press).pdf
S. Qin and H.-X. Zhou (2014). Further development of the FFT-based method for atomistic modeling of protein folding and binding under crowding: optimization of accuracy and speed. J. Chem. Theory Comput. 10, 2824-2835.pdf.
A. Wright, P. Batsomboon, J. Dai, I. Hung, H.-X. Zhou, G. Dudley, and T. A. Cross (2016). Differential binding of rimantadine enantiomers to Influenza A M2 proton channel. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 138, 1506-1509.pdf
A. R. Cormier, X. Pang, M. I. Zimmerman, H.-X. Zhou, and A. K. Paravastu (2013). Molecular structure of RADA16-I designer self-assembling peptide nanofibers. ACS Nano 7, 7562-7572.pdf
Laboratory and Office |
Room 419/419A (Computational) and Room 322/407 (Experimental)
Kasha Laboratory of Biophysics, Florida State University
Tallahassee, FL 32306
Phone: (850) 645-1336(office)/1334(lab); Fax: (850) 644-7244
E-mail: hzhou4@fsu.edu |
|