Dr. Alexander M. Andrianov

Principal Scientist at Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry of the National Academy of Sciences of Belarus. Professor of Belarussian State University. Winner of the 2017 National Academy of Sciences of Belarus award.


alexande.andriano@yandex.ru

He is co-author of about 300 scientific papers, including more than 60 one-man studies. The author of four monographs.

In 1988, he was recognized as one of the winners of the competition of the Academy of Sciences of the BSSR in the automation of scientific research, and in 1992 he won the 2nd prize of the competition of scientific works organized by the World Association for Theoretical Organic Chemistry (WATOC).

Laureate of the personal presidential premium for outstanding contribution to the socio-economic development of the country (2012).

The results of the molecular modeling of potential anti-HIV drugs are included in the top 10 results of scientists of the National Academy of Sciences of Belarus for 2012 and 2015.

In 1988 he defended his thesis for the degree of candidate of biological sciences, and in 2000 - doctor of chemical sciences in the specialty “03.00.02 - biophysics”. Specializes in the study of the spatial structures of protein molecules and computer-aided design of drugs.

In the period from 1981 to 1991. engaged in the development of the theory of conformational analysis of peptides and proteins, as well as the creation of algorithms and programs designed to model their three-dimensional structure based on experimental data. He is a co-author of the original method of computer modeling of the spatial structure of proteins according to NMR spectroscopy data, the software and algorithmic support of which is included in the registry of the Fund of Algorithms and Programs of the Academy of Sciences of the BSSR and has found practical use in a number of research centers in the CIS and foreign countries. Since 1992, using the developed methods, he has been working on the problem of studying the structural organization of functionally important sections of the envelope proteins of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV).

Since September 2018, she has been working part-time as a professor at the Department of Biomedical Informatics, FPMI.