A New Phase for Structural Biology - With Carol Robinson

A New Phase for Structural Biology - With Carol Robinson

The Royal Institution via YouTube Direct link

Intro

1 of 31

1 of 31

Intro

Class Central Classrooms beta

YouTube videos curated by Class Central.

Classroom Contents

A New Phase for Structural Biology - With Carol Robinson

Automatically move to the next video in the Classroom when playback concludes

  1. 1 Intro
  2. 2 Count Rumford one of the founding members of the Royal Institution
  3. 3 J.J. Thomson unveiled the discovery of the electron
  4. 4 First mass spectrometers
  5. 5 Mass spectrum of aspirin
  6. 6 Mass Spectrum of Melanocyte Stimulating Hormone
  7. 7 Nobel prize for chemistry 2002
  8. 8 Electrospray - without unfolding
  9. 9 Folding in the presence of molecular chaperones
  10. 10 A new phase for structural biology?
  11. 11 Proteins with many different conformations
  12. 12 The passage of complexes through the mass spectrometer
  13. 13 Scientific goals and questions
  14. 14 Unraveling polydispersity - the alpha crystallins
  15. 15 Disassembly predicts evolutionary assembly pathways
  16. 16 Mass spectrometry to identify the building blocks within complexes
  17. 17 Micelles protect membrane complexes and lipid binding remains intact
  18. 18 From micelles to membrane proteins in the gas phase
  19. 19 ATP Synthase - 95:1 DDM: protein
  20. 20 Mass spectrum of intact ATPase from Thermus thermophilus
  21. 21 Mass spectral assignment strategy - Massign
  22. 22 New ways to study how small molecules stabilise membrane proteins
  23. 23 Monitoring unfolding of AqpZ as a function of POPG binding
  24. 24 P-glycoprotein - an ABC transporter and drug efflux pump
  25. 25 Looking for a small difference
  26. 26 Mechanisms of drug resistance
  27. 27 Zinc binding to a human metalloprotease ZMPSTE24
  28. 28 Progeria is a common side effect of anti- HIV drugs
  29. 29 Processing of lamin A peptides is inhibited by drug binding
  30. 30 Sugar transporter semiSWEET - remodeling the lipid bilayer
  31. 31 From Neon to rotary motors to flipping lipids and drugs

Never Stop Learning.

Get personalized course recommendations, track subjects and courses with reminders, and more.

Someone learning on their laptop while sitting on the floor.