Bioorthogonal chemistry allows rapid and highly selective reactivity in biological environments. The copper-catalyzed azide–alkyne cycloaddition (CuAAC) is a classic bioorthogonal reaction routinely used to modify azides or alkynes that have been introduced into biomolecules. Amber suppression is an efficient method for incorporating such chemical handles into proteins on the ribosome, in which noncanonical amino acids (ncAAs) are site specifically introduced into the polypeptide in response to an amber (UAG) stop codon. A variety of ncAA structures containing azides or alkynes have been proven useful for performing CuAAC chemistry on proteins. To improve CuAAC efficiency, biologically incorporated alkyne groups can be reacted with azide su...
In order to construct biologically active materials for applications in nanotechnology and medicine,...
In order to construct biologically active materials for applications in nanotechnology and medicine,...
The merging of site-specific incorporation of small bioorthogonal functional groups into proteins vi...
Bioorthogonal chemistry allows rapid and highly selective reactivity in biological environments. The...
Bioorthogonal chemistry allows rapid and highly selective reactivity in biological environments. The...
The emergence of bioorthogonal reactions has greatly broadened the scope of biomolecule labeling and...
The emergence of bioorthogonal reactions has greatly broadened the scope of biomolecule labeling and...
The emergence of bioorthogonal reactions has greatly broadened the scope of biomolecule labeling and...
reaction—the most widely recognized example of click chemistry[2]—has been rapidly embraced for appl...
Considerable attention has been focused on improving the biocompatibility of Cu(I)-catalyzed azide-a...
Studying complex biological processes requires the ability to visualize biomolecules in the context ...
<div><p>Cu(I)-catalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition (CuAAC) is an efficient reaction linking an azido...
ABSTRACT: The merging of site-specific incorporation of small bioorthogonal functional groups into p...
In order to construct biologically active materials for applications in nanotechnology and medicine,...
Cu(I)-catalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition (CuAAC) is an efficient reaction linking an azido and an ...
In order to construct biologically active materials for applications in nanotechnology and medicine,...
In order to construct biologically active materials for applications in nanotechnology and medicine,...
The merging of site-specific incorporation of small bioorthogonal functional groups into proteins vi...
Bioorthogonal chemistry allows rapid and highly selective reactivity in biological environments. The...
Bioorthogonal chemistry allows rapid and highly selective reactivity in biological environments. The...
The emergence of bioorthogonal reactions has greatly broadened the scope of biomolecule labeling and...
The emergence of bioorthogonal reactions has greatly broadened the scope of biomolecule labeling and...
The emergence of bioorthogonal reactions has greatly broadened the scope of biomolecule labeling and...
reaction—the most widely recognized example of click chemistry[2]—has been rapidly embraced for appl...
Considerable attention has been focused on improving the biocompatibility of Cu(I)-catalyzed azide-a...
Studying complex biological processes requires the ability to visualize biomolecules in the context ...
<div><p>Cu(I)-catalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition (CuAAC) is an efficient reaction linking an azido...
ABSTRACT: The merging of site-specific incorporation of small bioorthogonal functional groups into p...
In order to construct biologically active materials for applications in nanotechnology and medicine,...
Cu(I)-catalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition (CuAAC) is an efficient reaction linking an azido and an ...
In order to construct biologically active materials for applications in nanotechnology and medicine,...
In order to construct biologically active materials for applications in nanotechnology and medicine,...
The merging of site-specific incorporation of small bioorthogonal functional groups into proteins vi...