The project is undertaken jointly by NCBS, Stanford University and Technical University of Denmark.
VLife Sciences Technologies said that the project involves studying coiled coil interactions in proteins which will provide opportunity to encounter and study hitherto uncharacterised myosins, key players in the dynamic organisation of cellular components.
Supreet Deshpande, director of VLife Sciences Technologies, said: “We are very pleased to be part of this collaboration involving highly reputed research institutes which rank among the best in the world and for the opportunity to work with some of the leading scientific minds. We are confident that this collaboration will result in an easy to use computational software solution which provides deeper insights into the complex domain of protein-protein interactions.”