203 results on '"Borman, P."'
Search Results
2. G PROTEIN-COUPLED RECEPTOR STRUCTURES AIDED DRUG DESIGN: A decade after a key structural analysis, scientists have a better understanding of the pharmaceutically important family of receptor proteins.
3. Cryo-electron microscopy innovators win 2017 Nobel Prize in Chemistry: Jacques Dubochet, Joachim Frank, and Richard Henderson honored for developing the technique, which enables unprecedented views of important biomolecules.
4. Molecular machine builds set of chiral molecules.
5. These female scientists should have won the Nobel.
6. New details on mercury’s route to the Arctic: Most deposition of the neurotoxic metal to tundra is Hg0 from atmosphere, not Hg2+ from rain and snow.
7. Treatment‐resistant cancers have Achilles’ heel: Common vulnerability is druggable pathway leading to iron-induced cell death.
8. Polymer ribbons undulate and walk in UV light.
9. Genetic screen of soil microbes uncovers novel antibiotics: Method could help researchers discover new natural products from hard-toculture microorganisms.
10. Process makes wood stronger than steel.
11. MODIFIED AND NEWLY DISCOVERED ENZYMES SPARKED INNOVATIVE CHEMISTRY: Advances this year included improved alkene oxidations, fatty acid decarboxylations, and aromatic alkylations.
12. Chemists engineer bacteria to use unnatural DNA bases to make unnatural proteins: Living microorganisms transcribe and translate DNA with six bases instead of the usual four.
13. Engineered myosin motor uses RNA arm to march on protein fibers.
14. Tetrapetalones yield to total synthesis at last: After researchers try for more than a decade, one team succeeds in creating the complex natural products.
15. Enzyme beats catalysts at oxidation game: Directed evolution yields enzyme that oxidizes alkenes in a unique way.
16. Máquina molecular fabrica un juego de moléculas quirales.
17. Reaction plays favorites in polyols.
18. Structure of superlong, ice-binding protein reported: Adhesin protein helps Antarctic bacteria stick to ice and photosynthetic diatoms at same time.
19. Secrets of stimulant abused in Middle East revealed: Vaccines help uncover how "pharmacoterrorism" drug fenethylline works in the body.
20. Chemists weave most complex pattern yet made from organic threads.
21. Tejen la red más compleja jamás fabricada con hilos orgánicos.
22. Los cánceres resistentes a los tratamientos tienen un talón de Aquiles: El punto débil más habitual es un tratamiento con fármacos que lleva a la muerte celular inducida por hierro.
23. Sensing fungus among us for less than a penny: Yeast-based biosensors could also be extended to sense viruses and bacteria.
24. Study confirmed how RNA-cleaving "Dicer" enzyme measures and then snips its substrates, advancing our understanding of gene silencing.
25. Five chemists who should have won the Nobel.
26. Nanoparticle Synthesis Paper Retracted After 12 Years.
27. Chemical information pioneer Eugene Garfield honored.
28. Bacterial enzyme turns α-amino acids into β-amino acids: Harnessing previously unknown protein modification could aid drug discovery.
29. Light-sensitive gel forms 3-D cell matrix.
30. Elusive Criegee reaction intermediate captured.
31. Designed enzyme rescues live bacteria: Protein designed from scratch is efficient enough to perform essential biological function in cells.
32. Boolean logic used to trigger drug delivery: Chemical gates open to release drugs from hydrogel site-selectively.
33. Palmitoyltransferase structures could aid inhibitor discovery: Enzymes add lipids to many proteins, including some associated with cancer.
34. Activating circadian clock kills cancer cells: Compound that targets the clock reduces brain cancer growth without side effects in mice.
35. Material's rotors spin freely and quickly: Metal-organic framework with rotating groups may play role in future molecular machines.
36. Genome editing protects hearing in mice: CRISPR-Cas9 technique reduces progressive hearing loss caused by rare genetic disease.
37. LOOK BACK At 2007: C&EN steps back in time to look at research advances from a decade ago.
38. Catalyst activates tertiary C-H bonds: Dirhodium agent functionalizes specific bonds without need for nearby directing groups.
39. Adenine base editor excels at fixing point mutations.
40. At last, cancer-fighting inhibitors hit deubiquitinase target selectively: Two research groups find small molecules that block the enzyme USP7 and show promise in mice with tumors.
41. Organic material sets luminescent record: Persistent glowing material could find applications in road paints and street signs.
42. Computationally designed 'mini proteins' prevent flu infection in mice: High-throughput design technique could lead to novel therapeutics.
43. Synthetic receptors imitate GPCRs.
44. Technique pinpoints active sites on catalyst surfaces.
45. New synthetic heparin could improve blood-thinning treatments.
46. Backward battery delivers ions to cells.
47. Two new ways to get proteins into cells: Disrupting endosomes and skipping endosomes entirely ease cell entry.
48. Technique eases analysis of damaged RNA: New method allows researchers to analyze gene expression in preserved tissue biopsy samples.
49. Marijuana receptor caught in the act.
50. Huntington's disease protein modified semisynthetically.
Catalog
Books, media, physical & digital resources
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.