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Michael Feig

Researcher at Michigan State University

Publications -  193
Citations -  28987

Michael Feig is an academic researcher from Michigan State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Molecular dynamics & Solvation. The author has an hindex of 54, co-authored 181 publications receiving 24201 citations. Previous affiliations of Michael Feig include Scripps Research Institute & RIKEN Quantitative Biology Center.

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PRIMO: A transferable coarse-grained force field for proteins

TL;DR: The results suggest the applicability of the PRIMO force field in the study of protein structures in aqueous solution, structure predictions as well as ab initio folding of small peptides.
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Slow-Down in Diffusion in Crowded Protein Solutions Correlates with Transient Cluster Formation.

TL;DR: In this article, a detailed insight into how diffusion depends on protein-protein contacts is presented based on extensive all-atom molecular dynamics simulations of concentrated villin headpiece solutions, and rotational diffusion was found to slow down more significantly than translational diffusion.
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Protein Structure Refinement through Structure Selection and Averaging from Molecular Dynamics Ensembles.

TL;DR: It is found that sub-microsecond MD-based sampling when combined with ensemble averaging can produce moderate but consistent refinement for most systems in the CASP targets considered here.
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Evaluating CASP4 predictions with physical energy functions.

TL;DR: It is shown that the best physical scoring functions can be applied successfully in automated consensus scoring applications where a single best conformation has to be selected from a set of structures from different sources.
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Balancing an accurate representation of the molecular surface in generalized born formalisms with integrator stability in molecular dynamics simulations.

TL;DR: It is found that very close agreement between generalized Born methods and the Poisson theory based on the commonly used sharp molecular surface definition results in energy drift and simulation artifacts in molecular dynamics simulation protocols with standard 2‐fs time steps.