All Stories

  1. Navigating Homogeneous Graph Paths Through Amyloidogenic and Non‐Amyloidogenic Hexapeptides
  2. Chemical Evolution of Early Macromolecules: From Prebiotic Oligopeptides to Self‐Organizing Biosystems via Amyloid Formation
  3. The length and the width of the human brain circuit connections are strongly correlated
  4. Novel enzymes for biodegradation of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons identified by metagenomics and functional analysis in short-term soil microcosm experiments
  5. Gluing GAP to RAS Mutants: A New Approach to an Old Problem in Cancer Drug Development
  6. Robust circuitry-based scores of structural importance of human brain areas
  7. Discovery and biocatalytic characterization of opine dehydrogenases by metagenome mining
  8. A Note on the LogRank Conjecture in Communication Complexity
  9. Succinct Amyloid and Nonamyloid Patterns in Hexapeptides
  10. Identifying super-feminine, super-masculine and sex-defining connections in the human braingraph
  11. The multiple alignments of very short sequences
  12. The Budapest Amyloid Predictor and Its Applications
  13. The braingraph.org database with more than 1000 robust human connectomes in five resolutions
  14. The Graph of Our Mind
  15. The frequent complete subgraphs in the human connectome
  16. The Frequent Network Neighborhood Mapping of the human hippocampus shows much more frequent neighbor sets in males than in females
  17. The frequent subgraphs of the connectome of the human brain
  18. High-resolution directed human connectomes and the Consensus Connectome Dynamics
  19. Comparing advanced graph-theoretical parameters of the connectomes of the lobes of the human brain
  20. Mapping correlations of psychological and structural connectome properties of the dataset of the human connectome project with the maximum spanning tree method
  21. MetaHMM: A webserver for identifying novel genes with specified functions in metagenomic samples
  22. Near perfect protein multi-label classification with deep neural networks
  23. The Robustness and the Doubly-Preferential Attachment Simulation of the Consensus Connectome Dynamics of the Human Brain
  24. The braingraph.org database of high resolution structural connectomes and the brain graph tools
  25. Brain size bias compensated graph-theoretical parameters are also better in women’s structural connectomes
  26. The “Giant Virus Finder” discovers an abundance of giant viruses in the Antarctic dry valleys
  27. Life without dUTPase
  28. Parameterizable consensus connectomes from the Human Connectome Project: the Budapest Reference Connectome Server v3.0
  29. Fast and exact sequence alignment with the Smith–Waterman algorithm: The SwissAlign webserver
  30. How to Direct the Edges of the Connectomes: Dynamics of the Consensus Connectomes and the Development of the Connections in the Human Brain
  31. Significant differences found in short nucleotide sequences of human intestinal metagenomes of Northern-European and Chinese Origin
  32. Nucleotide 9-mers characterize the type II diabetic gut metagenome
  33. Evaluating the Quantitative Capabilities of Metagenomic Analysis Software
  34. Giant viruses of the Kutch Desert
  35. Graph Theoretical Analysis Reveals: Women’s Brains Are Better Connected than Men’s
  36. A note on the PageRank of undirected graphs
  37. Antimycobacterial activity of peptide conjugate of pyridopyrimidine derivative against Mycobacterium tuberculosis in a series of in vitro and in vivo models
  38. The Budapest Reference Connectome Server v2.0
  39. Identifying diabetes-related important protein targets with few interacting partners with the PageRank algorithm
  40. On dimension reduction of clustering results in structural bioinformatics
  41. Visual Analysis of the Quantitative Composition of Metagenomic Communities: the AmphoraVizu Webserver
  42. The Metagenomic Telescope
  43. The Erdős webgraph server
  44. An intuitive graphical webserver for multiple-choice protein sequence search
  45. AmphoraNet: The webserver implementation of the AMPHORA2 metagenomic workflow suite
  46. Catalytic mechanism of  -phosphate attack in dUTPase is revealed by X-ray crystallographic snapshots of distinct intermediates, 31P-NMR spectroscopy and reaction path modelling
  47. Characterizing the Functional Similarity of Enzymes with High Co-Citation in Interaction Networks
  48. Equal Opportunity for Low-Degree Network Nodes: A PageRank-Based Method for Protein Target Identification in Metabolic Graphs
  49. Enhanced Cellular Uptake of a New, in Silico Identified Antitubercular Candidate by Peptide Conjugation
  50. How to Find Non Hub Important Nodes in Protein Networks?
  51. Mathematical modelling and computer simulation of Brownian motion and hybridisation of nanoparticle–bioprobe–polymer complexes in the low concentration limit
  52. Discovery of Novel MDR-Mycobacterium tuberculosis Inhibitor by New FRIGATE Computational Screen
  53. 3-D Brownian Motion Simulator for High-Sensitivity Nanobiotechnological Applications
  54. When the Web meets the cell: using personalized PageRank for analyzing protein interaction networks
  55. A hybrid clustering of protein binding sites
  56. Cysteine and tryptophan anomalies found when scanning all the binding sites in the Protein Data Bank
  57. ON THE ASYMMETRY OF THE RESIDUE COMPOSITIONS OF THE BINDING SITES ON PROTEIN SURFACES
  58. DECOMP: A PDB decomposition tool on the web
  59. Four spatial points that define enzyme families
  60. NASCENT: An automatic protein interaction network generation tool for non-model organisms
  61. On the Bond Graphs in the Delaunay-Tetrahedra of the Simplicial Decomposition of Spatial Protein Structures
  62. Modular Representations of Polynomials: Hyperdense Coding and Fast Matrix Multiplication
  63. Analyzing the simplicial decomposition of spatial protein structures
  64. Being a binding site: Characterizing residue composition of binding sites on proteins
  65. THE RAMACHANDRAN MAP OF MORE THAN 6,500 PERFECT POLYPEPTIDE CHAINS
  66. High throughput processing of the structural information in the protein data bank
  67. Pairs of codes with prescribed Hamming distances and coincidences
  68. Building a Structured PDB: The RS-PDB Database
  69. Building a Structured PDB: The RS-PDB Database
  70. Co-Orthogonal Codes
  71. On some applications of randomized memory
  72. Generalized Secure Routerless Routing
  73. Secure routerless routing
  74. A Note on Explicit Ramsey Graphs and Modular Sieves
  75. A Note on Non-Deterministic Communication Complexity with Few Witnesses
  76. Computing Elementary Symmetric Polynomials with a Subpolynomial Numberof Multiplications
  77. Constructing set systems with prescribed intersection sizes
  78. On k-wise set-intersections and k-wise Hamming-distances
  79. Co-orthogonal Codes
  80. Constructive Upper Bounds for Intersecting Set Systems
  81. Superpolynomial Size Set-systems with Restricted Intersections mod 6 and Explicit Ramsey Graphs
  82. Lower Bounds for (MOD p - MOD m ) Circuits
  83. Harmonic Analysis, Real Approximation, and the Communication Complexity of Boolean Functions
  84. A lower bound for depth-3 circuits with MOD m gates
  85. Circuits and multi-party protocols
  86. A degree-decreasing Lemma for (MOD q, MOD p) circuits
  87. On the power of circuits with gates of low L1 norms
  88. On set systems with restricted intersections modulo a composite number
  89. Harmonic analysis, real approximation, and the communication complexity of Boolean functions
  90. Separating the Communication Complexities of MOD m and MOD p Circuits
  91. The Bns Lower-Bound for Multiparty Protocols Is Nearly Optimal
  92. A weight-size trade-off for circuits with MOD m gates
  93. On a ramsey-theoretic property of orders
  94. Separating the communication complexities of MOD m and MOD p circuits
  95. Large parallel machines can be extremely slow for small problems
  96. Incomparability in parallel computation
  97. Incomparability in parallel computation
  98. Evaluating Genetic Algorithms in Protein-Ligand Docking
  99. Lower bounds for (MOD p-MOD m) circuits
  100. Amphiphilic Nature of New Antitubercular Drug Candidates and Their Interaction With Lipid Monolayer