Life depends on metals. While carbon, in terms of abundance and versatility, is considered THE element of life, the vast variety and diversity of the chemistry taking place in living organisms could not be achieved without metal ions. More than twenty metals are found in the human body, most of them being essential, some beneficial, and for others it is still unknown what role they might fulfil in a living cell. Here we give a short introduction into the bioinorganic world of the periodic table, providing just a few examples of key metals for life and aiming to give a flavour to gain further insights into this exciting field of inorganic chemistry at the intersection to the life sciences
Metal Ions in Life Sciences links coordination chemistry and biochemistry in their widest sense and ...
Metal ions and compounds are essential to life and many people routinely take them as food supplemen...
Metals play a vital role in the metabolism of plants and animals and, increasingly, in medicine. Thi...
Life depends on metals. While carbon, in terms of abundance and versatility, is considered THE eleme...
Biochemistry primarily focuses on the non-metal chemical elements carbon, oxygen, nitrogen, hydrogen...
This year marks the 20th anniversary of the field of metallomics. As a landmark in time, it is an oc...
A significant number of chemical elements are either essential for life with known functions, or pre...
Which elements are essential for human life? Here we make an element-by-element journey through the ...
Life depends on the ability of living organisms to effectively harness the chemical potential of the...
The bio-relevant metals (and derived compounds) of the Periodic Table of the Elements (PTE) are in t...
Metal ions play an indispensable role in biology, enabling enzymes to perform their functions and le...
The field of ‘inorganic biochemistry’ is rapidly changing due to metal ions properties which are ren...
This book covers material that could be included in a one-quarter or one-semester course in bioinorg...
Metal ions are fundamental elements for the maintenance of the lifespan of plants, animals and human...
Approximately two-thirds of the elements in the periodic table can be cate-gorized as metals. Beside...
Metal Ions in Life Sciences links coordination chemistry and biochemistry in their widest sense and ...
Metal ions and compounds are essential to life and many people routinely take them as food supplemen...
Metals play a vital role in the metabolism of plants and animals and, increasingly, in medicine. Thi...
Life depends on metals. While carbon, in terms of abundance and versatility, is considered THE eleme...
Biochemistry primarily focuses on the non-metal chemical elements carbon, oxygen, nitrogen, hydrogen...
This year marks the 20th anniversary of the field of metallomics. As a landmark in time, it is an oc...
A significant number of chemical elements are either essential for life with known functions, or pre...
Which elements are essential for human life? Here we make an element-by-element journey through the ...
Life depends on the ability of living organisms to effectively harness the chemical potential of the...
The bio-relevant metals (and derived compounds) of the Periodic Table of the Elements (PTE) are in t...
Metal ions play an indispensable role in biology, enabling enzymes to perform their functions and le...
The field of ‘inorganic biochemistry’ is rapidly changing due to metal ions properties which are ren...
This book covers material that could be included in a one-quarter or one-semester course in bioinorg...
Metal ions are fundamental elements for the maintenance of the lifespan of plants, animals and human...
Approximately two-thirds of the elements in the periodic table can be cate-gorized as metals. Beside...
Metal Ions in Life Sciences links coordination chemistry and biochemistry in their widest sense and ...
Metal ions and compounds are essential to life and many people routinely take them as food supplemen...
Metals play a vital role in the metabolism of plants and animals and, increasingly, in medicine. Thi...