Journal: Bioinformatics

Volume 10, Issue 6

575 -- 586Weider Chang, Ilya N. Shindyalov, Calton Pu, Philip E. Bourne. Design and application of PDBlib, a C++ macromolecular class library
587 -- 596Adam Godzik, Jeffrey Skolnick. Flexible algorithm for direct multiple alignment of protein structures and sequences
597 -- 603. Construction of a generalized consensus matrix for recognition of vertebrate pre-mRNA 3 -terminal processing sites
605 -- 611V. A. Shepelev, N. V. Yanishevsky. Multidimensional dot-matrices
613 -- 623Ying Xu, Richard J. Mural, Edward C. Uberbacher. Constructing gene models from accurately predicted exons: an application of dynamic programming
625 -- 634Yuhong Wang, Rolf A. Prade, James Griffith, William E. Timberlake, Jonathan Arnold. ODS_BOOTSTRAP: assessing the statistical reliability of physical maps by bootstrap resampling
635 -- 645Gisbert Schneider, Johannes Schuchhardt, Paul Wrede. Artificial neural networks and simulated molecular evolution are potential tools for sequence-oriented protein design
647 -- 655Pankaj Agarwal. Simulation of aggregation in Dictyostelium using the Cell Programming Language
657 -- 660T. N. Bryant. Identifying correct bacteriological vocabulary: software to look up RKC codes and statements
661 -- 669Victor V. Solovyev, Asaf A. Salamov. Predicting alpha-helix and beta-strand segments of globular proteins
671 -- 675Steven W. Smith, Ross A. Overbeek, Carl R. Woese, W. Gilbert, P. M. Gillevet. The genetic data environment an expandable GUI for multiple sequence analysis
677 -- 680M. L. Cain, L. W. Murray. Non-linear regression models to estimate the size of DNA fragments
681 -- 683S. R. Wilson, P. J. Solomon. Estimates for different stages of HIV/AIDS disease
685 -- 686M. G. Claros, Gunnar von Heijne. TopPred II: an improved software for membrane protein structure predictions
687 -- 688David S. Wishart, Robert F. Boyko, Brian D. Sykes. Constrained multiple sequence alignment using XALIGN