Chemical tools for imaging, manipulating, and tracking biological systems : diverse methods for prokaryotic and eukaryotic systems

Author(s)

    • Chenoweth, David M.

Bibliographic Information

Chemical tools for imaging, manipulating, and tracking biological systems : diverse methods for prokaryotic and eukaryotic systems

edited by David M. Chenoweth

(Methods in enzymology / editors in chief, Sidney P. Colowick, Nathan O. Kaplan, v. 638)

Academic Press, an imprint of Elsevier, 2020

1st ed

Available at  / 9 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Chemical Tools for Imaging, Manipulating, and Tracking Biological Systems: Diverse Methods for Prokaryotic and Eukaryotic Systems, Volume 638, the latest release in the Methods in Enzymology series, continues the legacy of this premier serial with quality chapters authored by leaders in the field. Sample chapters from this new release include In vitro characterization of the colibactin-activating peptidase ClbP enables development of a fluorogenic activity probe, Using FDAA probes to study cell division in Bacillus subtilis, Chemoenzymatic synthesis of UDP-sugars, Chemical tools for selective activity profiling of bacterial penicillin-binding proteins, Chemical Probes Reveal and Extraseptal Mode of Cross-linking in Staphylococcus Aureus, and much more.

Table of Contents

Utility of bacterial peptidoglycan recycling enzymes in the chemoenzymatic synthesis of valuable UDP sugar substrates Ophelia I. Ukaegbu, Kristen E. DeMeester, Hai Liang, Ashley R. Brown, Zachary S. Jones and Catherine Leimkuhler Grimes Chemical tools for selective activity profiling of bacterial penicillin-binding proteins Shabnam Sharifzadeh, Nathaniel W. Brown, Joshua D. Shirley, Kevin E. Bruce, Malcolm E. Winkler and Erin E. Carlson Fluorescent stem peptide mimics: In situ probes for peptidoglycan crosslinking Samir Gautam, Taehan Kim, Rebecca Howell and David A. Spiegel Gram-scale preparation of the antibiotic lead compound salicyl-AMS, a potent inhibitor of bacterial salicylate adenylation enzymes Nihar Kinarivala, Lisa Standke, Tezcan Guney, Cheng Ji, Naoyoshi Noguchi, Yasutomi Asano and Derek S. Tan Probe-enabled approaches for function-dependent cell sorting and characterization of microbiome subpopulations Andrea K. Steiger, Sarah J. Fansler, Christopher Whidbey and Aaron T. Wright Biochemical analysis of NlpC/p60 peptidoglycan hydrolase activity Byungchul Kim, Juliel Espinosa and Howard C. Hang Controlled release of bioactive signaling molecules using DNA-icosahedron Maulik S. Jani, Aneesh T. Veetil and Yamuna Krishnan Imaging nascent transcription in wholemount vertebrate embryos to characterize zygotic genome activation Hui Chen and Matthew C. Good Engineering reversible cell-cell interactions with chemical biology Clifford M. Csizmar and Carston R. Wagner Fast phosphine-activated control of protein function using unnatural lysine analogues Joshua S. Wesalo and Alexander Deiters Photopharmacological control of lipid function Johannes Morstein and Dirk Trauner Expanding the substrate selectivity in SNAP/CLIP-tagging of intracellular targets Miguel Macias-Contreras, Kevin N. Little and Lei Zhu Light-induced protein proximity by activation of gibberellic acid derivatives in living cells Michael J. Ziegler and Richard Wombacher Photoactivatable trimethoprim-based probes for spatiotemporal control of biological processes Daniel Z. Wu, Michael A. Lampson and David M. Chenoweth Site-specific antibody fragment conjugates for targeted imaging Robert Maloney, Zakey Yusuf Buuh, Yue Zhao and Rongsheng E. Wang Quantifying protein-protein interactions of the acyl carrier protein with solvatochromic probes Katherine Charov and Michael D. Burkart

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Related Books: 1-1 of 1

  • Methods in enzymology

    editors in chief, Sidney P. Colowick, Nathan O. Kaplan

    Academic Press c1955-

    v. 1 , v. 2 , v. 3 , v. 4 , v. 5 , v. 6 , v. 7 , v. 33 , v. 75 , v. 95 , v. 120 , v. 140 , v. 175 , v. 199 , v. 229 , v. 265 , v. 285 , v. 320 , v. 355

    Available at 179 libraries

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