Julie Forman-Kay (Toronto) speaks about her research in disordered proteins in a podcast interview to the Chemistry World. Available for download at
Chemistry World Podcast, August 2011, "6.05-13.00 Julie Forman-Kay reveals that disordered, unfolded proteins are much more functional and much more common than previously thought"
Part of this interview is also featured in the printed August 2011 issue of the Chemistry World (subscription required): M. Gross "Anarchy in the proteome", Chemistry World, August 2011, Volume 8, No 8, p.42-45. http://www.rsc.org/chemistryworld/Is...gust/index.asp
Mechanically, Magnetically, and "Rotationally Aligned" Membrane Proteins in Phospholi
Mechanically, Magnetically, and "Rotationally Aligned" Membrane Proteins in Phospholipid Bilayers Give Equivalent Angular Constraints for NMR Structure Determination.
Related Articles Mechanically, Magnetically, and "Rotationally Aligned" Membrane Proteins in Phospholipid Bilayers Give Equivalent Angular Constraints for NMR Structure Determination.
J Phys Chem B. 2010 Oct 20;
Authors: Park SH, Das BB, De Angelis AA, Scrima M, Opella SJ
The native environment for membrane proteins is the highly asymmetric phospholipid bilayer, and this has a large...
[Question from NMRWiki Q&A forum] What is the easiest way to emulate the "array" command from VNMR in XWINNMR/TOPSPIN?
What is the easiest way to emulate the "array" command from VNMR in XWINNMR/TOPSPIN?
What is the easiest way to emulate the "array" command from VNMR in XWINNMR/TOPSPIN? I recently moved from a lab using a Varian (Unity plus 500) with VNMR 6.whatever to a lab with only Bruker (AVANCE 300/400/500) spectrometers available. I am used to using the "array" caommand in VNMR and viewing the spectra with "dssa" or "dssh." I don't know a convenient way to do the same thing in XWINNMR. I know there are some AU programs but I'm not sure what they all do or if what I want is available. I tried...
nmrlearner
News from other NMR forums
0
09-24-2010 07:36 PM
[NMR paper] NMR structure of a stable "OB-fold" sub-domain isolated from staphylococcal nuclease.
NMR structure of a stable "OB-fold" sub-domain isolated from staphylococcal nuclease.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/corehtml/query/egifs/http:--linkinghub.elsevier.com-ihub-images-PubMedLink.gif Related Articles NMR structure of a stable "OB-fold" sub-domain isolated from staphylococcal nuclease.
J Mol Biol. 1995 Jul 7;250(2):134-43
Authors: Alexandrescu AT, Gittis AG, Abeygunawardana C, Shortle D
Similar folds often occur in proteins with dissimilar sequences. The OB-fold forms a part of the structures of at least seven non-homologous proteins...