Function and Structure of RNA
Huber Roland G.
HUBER Roland G. Principal Investigator Email: rghuber@bii.a-star.edu.sg Research Group: Function and Structure of RNA |
Dr. Roland G. Huber studied computational biology at the University of Innsbruck and at Yale University. After obtaining his PhD he commenced postdoctoral research at A*STAR in Singapore and was appointed as principal investigator in 2019. His group at the Bioinformatics Institute is primarily interested in the interplay of structure and function of RNA in gene regulation and infectious disease using statistical modeling, multi-omics data, and molecular simulations to reveal the structures and functional mechanisms of folded RNA and RNA-protein complexes. The group has previously worked on a variety of tropical and emerging infectious diseases including Dengue, Zika, and SARS-CoV-2. Other areas of interest are multi-omics and metagenomic analysis, particularly in the fields of animal health & aquaculture, and human immunology & ageing.
Research Interests
Roland G. Huber’s research focuses on the structure and function of RNA. The key focus in on integrating sequence, structural, and computational methods to elucidate key functional regions of viral and human RNA. RNA adopts a wide diversity of structure, but at the same time exhibits a high degree of flexibility and a plurality of interactions. This makes functional RNA structures challenging to approach with classical biomolecular structure elucidation techniques alone, and calls for new integrative data analysis approaches.
Group Member(s)
Senior Scientist I | DEFALCO Louis |
Senior Scientist I | KULKARNI Mandar |
Research Officer | CHIAM Aryeh Joseph |
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