Amino Acids Current Events | Amino Acids News | 3
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Anti-inflammatory effects of omega 3 fatty acid in fish oil linked to lowering of prostaglandin Omega 3 fatty acids in dietary fish oil are reported to have anti-inflammatory and anti-thrombogenic and anti-arrhythmic effects in humans, but the biochemical basis for these beneficial health effects is not well understood. view more (2006-04-04)
Bone's material flaws lead to disease The weak tendons and fragile bones characteristic of osteogenesis imperfecta, or brittle bone disease, stem from a genetic mutation that causes the incorrect substitution of a single amino acid in the chain of thousands of amino acids making up a collagen molecule, the basic building block of bone and tendon. view more (2009-08-05)
How left-handed amino acids got ahead: a demonstration of the evolution of biological homochirality in the lab A chemical reaction that demonstrates how key molecules in the biological world might have come to be predominately left or right handed has been reported by scientists at Imperial College London. Ever since discovering that the building blocks of the biological world, such as amino acids and sugars, are distinctively left or right handed -... view more... (2004-06-21)
A new wrinkle in evolution -- Man-made proteins Nature, through the trial and error of evolution, has discovered a vast diversity of life from what can only presumed to have been a primordial pool of building blocks. view more (2007-05-23)
Titanium dioxide — It slices, it dices ... Chemists from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and Arizona State University have proposed an elegantly simple technique for cleaving proteins into convenient pieces for analysis. view more (2007-04-02)
Does Omega 3 protect against ADHD? A new study will provide further understanding about the effects of omega-3 fatty acids on the brain function of children with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). view more (2006-12-06)
Impersonating nature Embargoed until 19:00 9 February 2000 view more (2000-02-08)
Researchers describe how cells take out the trash to prevent disease Garbage collectors are important for removing trash; without them waste accumulates and can quickly become a health hazard. Similarly, individual cells that make up such biological organisms as humans also have sophisticated methods for managing waste. view more (2008-11-11)
Scripps scientists find structure of a protein that makes cancer cells resistant to chemotherapy A research team at the Scripps Research Institute has obtained the first glimpse of a protein that keeps certain substances, including many drugs, out of cells. The protein, called P-glycoprotein or P-gp for short, is one of the main reasons cancer cells are resistant to chemotherapy drugs. Understanding its structure may help scientists design... view more... (2009-03-27)
Obesity chokes up the cellular power plant The machinery responsible for energy production in fat cells is working poorly as a result of obesity. Finnish research done at the University of Helsinki and the National Public Health Institute shows that this may aggravate and work to maintain the obese state in humans. view more (2008-03-13)
New compound effectively treats fungal infections A new mechanism to attack hard-to-treat fungal infections has been revealed by scientists from the biotech company Anacor Pharmaceuticals Inc., California, and the European Molecular Biology Laboratory [EMBL] outstation in Grenoble, France. view more (2007-06-25)
Free-energy theory borne out in large-scale protein folding In unprecedented new research, scientists at Rice University have combined theory and experiment for the first time to both predict theoretically and verify experimentally the protein-folding dynamics of a large, complex protein. view more (2005-10-04)
New NIST reference material for peptide analysis The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has issued its first-ever reference material designed to improve the performance and reliability of experiments to measure the masses and concentrations of peptides in biomolecular samples. view more (2007-05-29)
New technology illuminates protein interactions in living cells While fluorescence has long been used to tag biological molecules, a new technology developed at Yale allows researchers to use tiny fluorescent probes to rapidly detect and identify protein interactions within living cells while avoiding the biological disruption of existing methods, according to a report in Nature Chemical Biology. view more (2007-11-12)
Blood sugar's manufacture limited by building blocks' supply Researchers have discovered a factor that controls blood sugar's manufacture in a novel way: by limiting the supply of its building blocks. The findings are reported in the April issue of the journal Cell Metabolism, published by Cell Press. view more (2007-04-04)
Protein pulling -- Learning how proteins fold by pulling them apart Rice University physicists have unveiled an innovative way of finding out how proteins get their shape based on how they unfold when pulled apart. view more (2007-07-20)
New tool helps researchers identify DNA patterns of cancer, genetic disorders A new tool will help researchers identify the minute changes in DNA patterns that lead to cancer, Huntington's disease and a host of other genetic disorders. view more (2009-05-19)
Study shows marine omega-3 fatty acids have positive effect on muscle mass A research team led by Carole Thivierge, from Université Laval's Institute of Nutraceutics and Functional Foods, shows that omega-3 fatty acids from fish oil have a positive effect on the metabolism of muscle proteins. view more (2007-05-10)
Researchers prolong the plasma half-life of biopharmaceutical proteins Many biopharmaceuticals comprise small proteins that are quickly eliminated from the body. Scientists at the Technische Universitaet Muenchen (TUM) combine such small proteins with a kind of molecular balloon that swells and thus prolongs the half-life of the proteins in the body. view more (2009-09-21)
Pennsylvania researchers find liver transplants provide metabolic cure for rare genetic disease Liver transplants cured the metabolic symptoms of 11 patients with a rare but devastating genetic condition known as Maple Syrup Urine Disease (MSUD), according to a study by researchers from Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh and the Clinic for Special Children. view more (2006-04-11)
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