Dr. Thomas D. Schneider
Thomas D.
Schneider, Ph.D. is a Senior Investigator
in the RNA Biology Laboratory, National Cancer
Institute, a part of the National Institutes of Health. He was on the
Editorial Board of Nucleic Acids
Research.
Tom invented the
sequence logo, a widely used information-theory
based graphic to display sequence alignments. He also
invented the
Medusa™ Sequencer,
a DNA sequencing machine that is one molecule and he
discovered
70% molecular efficiency,
which defines the exact relationship between information and
energy in biological systems.
His papers include
Generalizing the Isothermal Efficiency by Using Gaussian
Distributions,
Restriction enzymes use a 24 dimensional coding space to recognize 6 base long DNA sequences,
70% efficiency of bistate molecular machines explained by information
theory, high dimensional geometry and evolutionary convergence,
Small membrane proteins found by comparative genomics and ribosome
binding site models,
Discovery of novel tumor suppressor p53 response elements using
information theory,
Xeroderma Pigmentosum-Variant Patients from America, Europe, and
Asia,
Twenty Years of Delila and Molecular Information Theory,
Discovery of Fur binding site clusters in Escherichia coli by
information theory models, and
Use of the “Perceptron” algorithm to distinguish translational
initiation sites in E. coli.
His patents include
Method and apparatus for producing an image of a person’s face at a
different age,
High speed parallel molecular nucleic acid sequencing,
Molecular motor,
Computational analysis of nucleic acid information defines binding
sites,
Probe for nucleic acid sequencing and methods of use, and
Molecular computing elements, gates, and flip-flops.
Tom earned his B.S. in biology at MIT in 1978 and earned his
Ph.D. in 1984
from the University of Colorado, Department of Molecular, Cellular, and
Developmental Biology. His thesis was on applying Shannon’s information
theory to DNA and RNA binding sites.