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Recent Citations
Jones S, Zhang X et.al. Core signaling pathways in human pancreatic cancers revealed by global genomic analyses. Science. 2008 Sep 26;321(5897):1801-6.
Parsons DW, Jones S et.al. An integrated genomic analysis of human glioblastoma multiforme. Science. 2008 Sep 26;321(5897):1807-12.
Liu J, Bartesaghi A et.al. Molecular architecture of native HIV-1 gp120 trimers. Nature. 2008 Sep 4;455(7209):109-13.
(Previously featured citations...)Chimera Search
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September 23, 2008
Chimera's next production release (date TBA) will be the last for IRIX and Tru64. Daily builds for these platforms will be halted at that time.
August 5, 2008
The ConSurf Server now provides results as Chimera Web data: a single click displays the color-coded query structure and multiple sequence alignment in a locally installed copy of Chimera (screen shot).
July 9, 2008
Chimera production release v1.2540 is now available. Changes since the previous production release (v1.2470, Nov 2007) are detailed in the release notes.
(Previous news...)Upcoming Events
UCSF Chimera is a highly extensible program for interactive visualization and analysis of molecular structures and related data, including density maps, supramolecular assemblies, sequence alignments, docking results, trajectories, and conformational ensembles. High-quality images and animations can be generated. Chimera includes complete documentation and several tutorials, and can be downloaded free of charge for academic, government, non-profit, and personal use. Chimera is developed by the Resource for Biocomputing, Visualization, and Informatics and funded by the NIH National Center for Research Resources (grant P41-RR01081).
Feature Highlight
A structure can be colored to show values of an attribute such as conservation in an associated sequence alignment. Different coloring schemes can be applied. Multalign Viewer reads alignments in several formats and automatically associates them with structures in Chimera, allowing for a few residue mismatches. A variety of conservation measures are available. The image includes 2D labels.
(More features...)Gallery Sample
Heterotrimeric G protein (Protein Data Bank entry 1gg2) with the alpha subunit shown in green, the beta subunit in light blue, and the gamma subunit in brown. The Intersurf tool was used to show the interface between the alpha and beta subunits. The interface surface is colored to show the distance between atoms across the interface (red for closer together, blue for farther apart). (More samples...)