We invite you to attend the first Pittsburgh Center for HIV Protein Interactions (PCHPI) Workshop on HIV protein interactions!
The purpose of the workshop is to initiate collaborations between the PCHPI and the HIV research community at large and highlight the center's focus and capabilities.
The PCHPI is one of three centers launched by NIGMS and NIAID to deepen
our biological understanding of HIV. These centers are led by Alan
Frankel (UCSF), Angela Gronenborn (University of Pittsburgh School of
Medicine) and Wesley Sundquist (University of Utah). The centers will
integrate a variety of techniques from structural biology and biochemistry
to capture in unprecedented detail the three-dimensional structures of HIV
proteins bound to human cellular components, such as proteins or DNA. The
structural information will help elucidate how the different components
interact and reveal new approaches for disrupting those interactions,
potentially leading to new targets for HIV therapies or vaccines.
The University of Pittsburgh Center for HIV Protein Interactions (PCHPI)
specializes in imaging and determining the structures of HIV proteins and
their host cell interaction partners and, more specifically, in HIV-host
interactions that occur immediately after the virus fuses with the host
cell and before integration of the viral genome into that of the host
cell. The center is developing a framework for computationally
predicting important cellular partners for HIV and for experimentally
validating such predictions.
New methodologies and tools developed by the centers will be available to
the research community at large. The centers also will collaborate with
other scientists engaged in structural and functional studies of HIV,
including researchers funded by NIAID through a coordinated funding
program. |