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X-Ray Crystallography
Nuclear Magnetic Resonance
Electron Paramagnetic Resonance
Laser Spectroscopy
Muscle Mechanics
Basic Sciences Computing Laboratory |
X-Ray
Crystallography
The biological molecules that make up our bodies have
evolved exquisite ways to control and promote complex
chemistries and communications that orchestrate our
daily lives, as well as keep harmful disease causing
“bugs” at bay. When these systems malfunction, or the
immune system is overwhelmed, the effects can be
catastrophic. To understand the changes that lead to
adverse effects to human health and also disease, we
need to understand how the molecular “players” work.
Most drugs and toxic compounds are small relative to the
biological molecules they target. We therefore need to
image the interactions on the scale of these smaller
compounds. One of the major routes to obtaining highly
detailed images of biological molecules at the level of
the compounds to which they bind, is using a technique
called X-ray crystallography. Results using this
technique have impacted human health and disease in many
ways. Improving drug efficacy and selectivity (reducing
unwanted side-effects) through improved design; guiding
vaccine development; understanding the evolution of
multi-drug resistant organisms, and how to combat them;
optimization of strategies for the removal of toxic
compounds from the environment; engineering bacteria
into factories for complex drug production.
The Kahlert Structural Biology Laboratory (KSBL) was
formed in 1989 in response to the targeting of Molecular
and Cellular Biology as a research focus for the
University, and is the center for biological X-ray
crystallography.
Since its inception, the KSBL has made
important contributions to areas of biomedical science,
biotechnology and chemical biology, resulting in over
150 publications
in
journals such as Cell, Nature, Science, Nature
Structural Biology, EMBO Journal, Biochemistry and
Journal of Molecular Biology.
These research areas include lipid/protein interactions,
metalloenzymes, iron storage proteins, citric acid cycle
enzymes, microbial toxins, microbial virulence, viral
DNA packaging, metabolic control of enzymes and amino
acid derived cofactors. The KSBL is one of only two such
facilities available in the State of Minnesota, and, as
such, serves the community at large. |
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