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Willy Wriggers

Researcher at Old Dominion University

Publications -  35
Citations -  903

Willy Wriggers is an academic researcher from Old Dominion University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Stereocilium & Stereocilia. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 35 publications receiving 783 citations. Previous affiliations of Willy Wriggers include D. E. Shaw Research & Cornell University.

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Using Situs for the integration of multi-resolution structures

TL;DR: This review provides an overview of the Situs package as it exists today with an emphasis on functionality and workflows supported by version 2.5.
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Conventions and workflows for using Situs

TL;DR: Typical workflows and conventions encountered during processing of biophysical data from electron microscopy, tomography or small-angle X-ray scattering are described.
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Using Sculptor and Situs for simultaneous assembly of atomic components into low-resolution shapes

TL;DR: An interactive peak-selection strategy that enables the user to explore a preliminary score landscape generated by the colors tool of Situs and a novel simultaneous multi-body docking in Sculptor and Situs that softly enforces shape complementarities between components using the normalization of the cross-correlation coefficient are implemented.
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Conserved Intramolecular Interactions Maintain Myosin Interacting-Heads Motifs Explaining Tarantula Muscle Super-Relaxed State Structural Basis.

TL;DR: The new model, PDB 3JBH, explains the structural origin of the ATP turnover rates detected in relaxed tarantula muscle by ascribing the veryslow rate to docked unphosphorylated heads, the slow rate to phosphorylated docked heads, and the fast rate to phosphate-based undocked heads.
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Evolutionary bidirectional expansion for the tracing of alpha helices in cryo-electron microscopy reconstructions.

TL;DR: VolTrac (Volume Tracer) - a novel technique for the annotation of alpha-helical density in cryo-EM data sets by using a genetic algorithm and a bidirectional expansion with a tabu search strategy to trace helical regions.