Proteins are Nature’s fundamental multitools, fulfilling crucial roles in catalyzing complex chemical reactions, mediating cell-cell signaling to coordinate biochemical responses, and providing the structural scaffolding necessary for intracellular transport and cell motility among a myriad of other functions. The functional diversity of proteins is enhanced by the associations of intracellular protein, nucleic acid and small molecule components to generate sophisticated self-assembled architectures. The “bottom-up” construction of biological components is a burgeoning field of study which seeks to generate novel functional assemblies by directing protein interactions in a controlled fashion. Protein complexes in Nature are driven by an acc...
ABSTRACT: For many applications, increasing synergy between distinct proteins through organization i...
The co-self-assembly of proteins and nucleic acids (NAs) produces complex biomolecular machines (e.g...
In nature, the assembly of individual protein subunits into larger quaternary structures allows new ...
Proteins are Nature’s fundamental multitools, fulfilling crucial roles in catalyzing complex chemica...
Nature has long been a source of fascination, inspiration and humility for chemists. Despite our bes...
Protein based nanotechnology is an emerging field, which could someday provide novel protein materia...
Many proteins exist naturally as symmetrical homooligomers or homopolymers1. The emergent structural...
The de novo design of protein-protein interactions (PPIs) has proven to be an immense challenge due ...
The co-self-assembly of proteins and nucleic acids (NAs) produces complex biomolecular machines (e.g...
The co-self-assembly of proteins and nucleic acids (NAs) produces complex biomolecular machines (e.g...
Proteins, perhaps more than any other class of molecule, make life as we know it possible. The unriv...
Protein-protein interactions are ubiquitous throughout nature at many length and time scales—from tr...
Several phenomena occurring throughout the life of living things start and end with proteins. Variou...
We describe a general computational method for designing proteins that self-assemble to a desired sy...
Metalloproteins are some of the best catalysts in Nature. The synergistic combination of transition ...
ABSTRACT: For many applications, increasing synergy between distinct proteins through organization i...
The co-self-assembly of proteins and nucleic acids (NAs) produces complex biomolecular machines (e.g...
In nature, the assembly of individual protein subunits into larger quaternary structures allows new ...
Proteins are Nature’s fundamental multitools, fulfilling crucial roles in catalyzing complex chemica...
Nature has long been a source of fascination, inspiration and humility for chemists. Despite our bes...
Protein based nanotechnology is an emerging field, which could someday provide novel protein materia...
Many proteins exist naturally as symmetrical homooligomers or homopolymers1. The emergent structural...
The de novo design of protein-protein interactions (PPIs) has proven to be an immense challenge due ...
The co-self-assembly of proteins and nucleic acids (NAs) produces complex biomolecular machines (e.g...
The co-self-assembly of proteins and nucleic acids (NAs) produces complex biomolecular machines (e.g...
Proteins, perhaps more than any other class of molecule, make life as we know it possible. The unriv...
Protein-protein interactions are ubiquitous throughout nature at many length and time scales—from tr...
Several phenomena occurring throughout the life of living things start and end with proteins. Variou...
We describe a general computational method for designing proteins that self-assemble to a desired sy...
Metalloproteins are some of the best catalysts in Nature. The synergistic combination of transition ...
ABSTRACT: For many applications, increasing synergy between distinct proteins through organization i...
The co-self-assembly of proteins and nucleic acids (NAs) produces complex biomolecular machines (e.g...
In nature, the assembly of individual protein subunits into larger quaternary structures allows new ...