Researchers find clue to stopping Alzheimer's-like diseases - HealthCanal.com
Researchers find clue to stopping Alzheimer's-like diseases HealthCanal.com
The study used Nuclear Magnetic Resonance spectroscopy to look at a molecular level at the interactions of the different proteins and identified tiny differences in the physical and chemical properties of the surfaces that made a great difference to ...
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Mice may hold the key to stopping Alzheimer's-like diseases - HealthCanal.com
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Mice may hold the key to stopping Alzheimer's-like diseases
HealthCanal.com
The study used Nuclear Magnetic Resonance spectroscopy to look at a molecular level at the interactions of the different proteins and identified tiny differences in the physical and chemical properties of the surfaces that made a great difference to ...
Mice may hold the key to stopping Alzheimer's-like diseases - HealthCanal.com
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06-26-2014 09:58 PM
[NMR images] Membrane Proteins and Related Diseases
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http://www.spectroscopynow.com/common/images/thumbnails/1438cadfde3.jpgResearchers have turned to solution NMR spectroscopy to help them characterise the structure and dynamics of the transmembrane portion of the protein amyloid precursor protein, APP, of which there are two genetic variants linked to familial, or hereditary Alzheimer's disease.
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nmrlearner
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HealthCanal.com
Wright's laboratory and others have been studying these interactions using a technique called nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. However, E1A's intrinsic stickiness means that it tends to aggregate at NMR-friendly concentrations, rendering ...
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Nuclear Imaging Tools Researchers used nuclear magnetic resonance imaging and computer modeling to see how proteins assemble themselves. Many of the intermediate states of folding last a millisecond or less, said Lewis Kay, a study author and a ...
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nmrlearner
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More than a third of our proteins are still a mystery for scientists - HealthCanal.co
More than a third of our proteins are still a mystery for scientists - HealthCanal.com
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More than a third of our proteins are still a mystery for scientists
HealthCanal.com
Several tools to study the structure of these proteins are already available, such as Nuclear Magnetic Resonance and Small-angle X-ray Scattering (SAXS); ...
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