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proteins: search

MLS offers recombinant proteins from yeast

These proteins are produced in yeast for assay development and research applications and have improved folding and glycosylation characteristics compared with E.coli-produced proteins.

Adaptive proteins "control" their own evolution

A previously hidden mechanism that guides the way biological organisms respond to the forces of natural selection has been observed making the proteins found in most living organisms behave like adaptive machines, subtly directing aspects of their own evolution to create order out of randomness. Researchers Raj Chakrabarti, Herschel Rabitz, Stacey Springs and George McLendon made the discovery while carrying out experiments on the proteins constituting the electron transport chain (ETC), a biochemical network essential for metabolism.

Ultra-Rapid and Ultra-Sensitive Detection of Proteins in Chemiluminescent Western Blotting

The UVP BioSpectrum® Imaging System for high sensitivity detection of proteins in conjunction with the FemtoMax™ chemiluminescent-HRP substrate provides for extremely fast and sensitive detection of proteins by Western blot. This application note demonstrates the detection of 6 different commonly used epitope tags using Rockland Immunochemicals’s epitope tag specific antibodies and a new 12-epitope tag control marker.

Antibodies to cockroach and mouse proteins associated with asthma and allergies risk

November 13, 2008 -- New York, NY -- A study released by researchers at the Columbia Center for Children's Environmental Health (CCCEH) at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health shows that developing antibodies to cockroach and mouse proteins is associated with a greater risk for wheeze, hay fever, and eczema in preschool urban children as young as three years of age. The study, published in the November 2008 issue of the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, is the first to focus on the links between antibody responses to cockroach and mouse proteins and respiratory and allergic symptoms in such a young age group.

Scientists develop genome-wide platform to study how specialized proteins regulate RNA in living, intact cells

Add our medical news to StumbleUpon - Scientists develop genome-wide platform to study how specialized proteins regulate RNA in living, intact cells Add our medical news to Facebook - Scientists develop genome-wide platform to study how specialized proteins regulate RNA in living, intact cells

Diabetic Kidney Decline Averted by Fish Consumption

New scientific research points to the fact that diabetes sufferers who eat fish dishes at least twice a week have a much lower incidence of kidney disease. Though regularly doctors advise patients to limit the amounts of proteins they ingest, the new UK study seems to indicate that the source of the proteins is the problem, and not the substances in themselves. It may actually benefit diabetics to eat proteins, provided they come from fresh fish.

Proteins Control Their Own Evolution

A team of Princeton University scientists has discovered that chains of proteins found in most living organisms act like adaptive machines, possessing the ability to control their own evolution.

Proteins with cruise control provide new perspective

A team of Princeton University scientists has discovered that chains of proteins found in most living organisms act like adaptive machines, possessing the ability to control their own evolution.

Genetic proteins that can help detect progress to oesophageal cancer identified

Rhode Island Hospital researchers say that they have identified genetic proteins that may help detect people who are likely to progress to oesophageal cancer.

Genetic proteins that can help detect progress to oesophageal cancer identified

Rhode Island Hospital researchers say that they have identified genetic proteins that may help detect people who are likely to progress to oesophageal cancer.

How Proteins Bind With DNA

Biochemists at North Carolina State University have answered a fundamental question of how important bacterial proteins make life-and-death decisions that allow them to function, a finding that could provide a new target for drugs to disrupt bacterial decision-making processes and related diseases.

The Advantages of Fluorescent Proteins over Luciferase Using the iBox® Imaging System for In Vivo Imaging

The Advantages of Fluorescent Proteins over Luciferase Using the iBox® Imaging System for In Vivo Imaging

Quintet of proteins forms new, early-warning blood test before heart attack strikes

A team of Johns Hopkins biochemists has identified a mixed bag of five key proteins out of thousands secreted into blood draining from the heart's blood vessels that may together or in certain quantities form the basis of a far more accurate early warning test than currently in use of impending heart attack in people with severely reduced blood flow, or ischemia.

Quintet Of Proteins Forms New, Early-warning Blood Test Before Heart Attack Strikes

A team of Johns Hopkins biochemists has identified a mixed bag of five key proteins out of thousands secreted into blood draining from the heart's blood vessels that may together or in certain quantities form the basis of a far more accurate early warning test than currently in use of impending heart attack in people with severely reduced blood flow, or ischemia.

Quintet of proteins forms new, early-warning blood test before heart attack strikes

A team of Johns Hopkins biochemists has identified a mixed bag of five key proteins out of thousands secreted into blood draining from the heart's blood vessels that may together or in certain quantities form the basis of a far more accurate early warning test than currently in use of impending heart attack in people with severely reduced blood flow, or ischemia.

Quintet of proteins forms new, early-warning blood test before heart attack strikes

A team of Johns Hopkins biochemists has identified a mixed bag of five key proteins out of thousands secreted into blood draining from the heart's blood vessels that may together or in certain quantities form the basis of a far more accurate early warning test than currently in use of impending heart attack in people with severely reduced blood flow, or ischemia.

Evolution's New Wrinkle: Proteins With 'Cruise Control' Act Like Adaptive Machines

A team of Princeton University scientists has discovered that chains of proteins found in most living organisms act like adaptive machines, possessing the ability to control their own evolution.

Vermeer Etched With Proteins

MONTREAL, Nov. 12, 2008 -- A novel laser technology that can encourage finicky nerve cells to grow has also been used to etch a tiny version -- about as wide as the thickness of two human hairs -- of a Dutch master's painting using proteins.

Evolution's new wrinkle: Proteins with cruise control provide new perspective

(PhysOrg.com) -- A team of Princeton University scientists has discovered that chains of proteins found in most living organisms act like adaptive machines, possessing the ability to control their own evolution.

Programmable Genetic Clock Made Of Blinking Florescent Proteins Inside Bacteria Cells

UC San Diego bioengineers have created the first stable, fast and programmable genetic clock that reliably keeps time by the blinking of fluorescent proteins inside E. coli cells. The clock's blink rate changes when the temperature, energy source or other environmental conditions change, a fact that could lead to new kinds of sensors that convey information about the environment through the blinking rate.

CCNY Chemical Engineering Seminar: Self-Assembled Systems of Nanoparticles: Surprising Analogies with Proteins and New Optical Properties

CCNY Chemical Engineering Seminar: Self-Assembled Systems of Nanoparticles: Surprising Analogies with Proteins and New Optical Properties

Early Development Of Antibodies To Cockroach And Mouse Proteins Associated With Greater Risk For Asthma And Allergies In Preschool Children

A study released by researchers at the Columbia Center for Children's Environmental Health (CCCEH) at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health shows that developing antibodies to cockroach and mouse proteins is associated with a greater risk for wheeze, hay fever, and eczema in preschool urban children as young as three years of age.

Novozymes and Solae File Patent Application

The new technology improves both the taste and the solubility of the soy proteins, making it possible for food manufacturers to include higher levels of these proteins in their products and to introduce them to new products.


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