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Rice University scientists find split, mutant protein serves as building block for synthetic biological circuits
18-Mar-2013 - Rice University researchers have found a way to divide and modify enzymes to create what amounts to a genetic logic gate. Biochemist Matthew Bennett and graduate student David Shis created a library of AND gates by mutating a protein from a bacterial virus. The well-understood protein known as T7 ...
Energy saving chaperone Hsp90
18-Jan-2012 - A special group of proteins, the so-called chaperones, helps other proteins to obtain their correct conformation. Until now scientists supposed that hydrolyzing ATP provides the energy for the large conformational changes of chaperone Hsp90. Now a research team from the Nanosystems Initiative ...
Molecular structure of retrovirus enzyme solved, doors open to new AIDS drug design
19-Sep-2011 - Gamers have solved the structure of a retrovirus enzyme whose configuration had stumped scientists for more than a decade. The gamers achieved their discovery by playing Foldit, an online game that allows players to collaborate and compete in predicting the structure of protein molecules.After ...
15-Nov-2010 - Microfluidics can be used to trap a single DNA–enzyme complex in its native state, without immobilisation. These studies have usually been performed by immobilising either the enzyme or the DNA on a glass slide, but this may modify their properties, and make it difficult to analyse the ...
Research may help unlock the mysteries of human aging and behavior
30-Aug-2010 - Scientists have finally sequenced the entire genome of an ant, actually two very different species of ant, and the insights gleaned from their genetic blueprints are already yielding tantalizing clues to the extraordinary social behavior of ants. A result of a collaborative research project led ...
26-Aug-2010 - In a landmark study published in Nature, scientists have been able to create the first picture of genetic processes that happen inside every cell of our bodies. Using a 3-D visualization method called X-ray crystallography, Song Tan, an associate professor of biochemistry and molecular biology at ...
12-Jul-2010 - The brand-new Jean Jeener Bio-NMR Center at the VIB Department of Molecular and Cellular Interactions, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, has already played a role in a scientific breakthrough that made it into the journal Cell. Thanks to NMR technology, it is possible to determine the dynamic structure ...
28-Jun-2010 - Cancer occurs when human cells move and multiply inappropriately. Within cells, a process called phosphorylation serves as an on/off switch for a number of cellular processes that can be involved in cancer, including metabolism, transcription, configuration, movement, cell death and ...
New details about the Piers catalyst will help chemical industry improve products
11-May-2010 - Some people have streets named after them. Warren Piers, a chemistry professor at the University of Calgary, has a catalyst penned after him. And in a paper published in the online edition of Nature Chemistry, Piers and former graduate student Edwin van der Eide reveal the inner workings of the ...
Professor Torsi from the University of Bari receives Analytical Sciences distinction
06-May-2010 - Merck KGaA announced that the 2010 Heinrich Emanuel Merck Award for Analytical Sciences will go to Luisa Torsi, Professor of Analytical Chemistry at the University of Bari in Italy. This marks the first time that the award has been given to a woman and to a scientist in Italy. The award, which is ...
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