2nd Edition

Computational Biology A Statistical Mechanics Perspective, Second Edition

By Ralf Blossey Copyright 2019
    326 Pages
    by CRC Press

    312 Pages 71 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press





    Computational biology has developed rapidly during the last two decades following the genomic revolution which culminated in the sequencing of the human genome. More than ever it has developed into a field which embraces computational methods from different branches of the exact sciences: pure and applied mathematics, computer science, theoretical physics. This Second Edition provides a solid introduction to the techniques of statistical mechanics for graduate students and researchers in computational biology and biophysics.









    • Material has been reorganized to clarify equilbrium and nonequilibrium aspects of biomolecular systems






    • Content has been expanded, in particular in the treatment of the electrostatic interactions of biomolecules and the application of non-equilibrium statistical mechanics to biomolecules






    • New network-based approaches for the study of proteins are presented.






    All treated topics are put firmly in the context of the current research literature, allowing the reader to easily follow an individual path into a specific research field. Exercises and Tasks accompany the presentations of the topics with the intention of enabling the readers to test their comprehension of the developed basic concepts.



     



    Part 1: Equilibrium Statistical Physics. 1. Equilbrim Statistical Mechanics. 2. Biomolecular Structure: DNA, RNA, Proteins. 3. Phase Transitions in RNA. 4. Soft Matter Electrostatics. Part 2. Nonequilibrium Statistical Mechanics. 5. Bach to P: Probabilities Over Time. 6. Fluctuation Theorems. 7. Dynamics of Biological Networks. 8. Biological Networks: Space 

    Biography

    Ralf Blossey is a Research Director at the French National Center for Scientific Research, the CNRS, and is based in Lille, in the North of France. His work during the last fifteen years has focussed on the application of statistical mechanics methods to DNA, proteins, gene regulatory networks and chromatin. He has collaborated with many scientists from computer science, mathematics, computational biology, molecular and cellular biology, as well as colleagues from his original field of training, statistical physics.