User:TheLarry/Notebook/Larrys Notebook/2009/09/14/List of Papers Looked through today


 * 1) Asbury, C. (2005). Kinesin: world's tiniest biped. Current opinion in cell biology, 17(1), 89–97. Elsevier.
 * 2) Block, S. (1995). Nanometres and piconewtons: the macromolecular mechanics of kinesin. Trends in Cell Biology, 5(4), 169–175. Elsevier.
 * 3) Block, S., Goldstein, L., & Schnapp, B. (1990). Bead movement by single kinesin molecules studied with optical tweezers. Nature Publishing Group.
 * 4) Bustamante, C., Chemla, Y. R., Forde, N. R., & Izhaky, D. (2004). Mechanical processes in biochemistry. Annual review of biochemistry, 73, 705-48.
 * 5) Carter, N. J., & Cross, R. A. (2005). Mechanics of the kinesin step. Nature, 435(May), 308-312.
 * 6) Carter, N. J., & Cross, R. A. (2006). Kinesin’s moonwalk. Current Opinion in Cell Biology, (Figure 1), 61-67.
 * 7) Cross, R. A. (2004). The kinetic mechanism of kinesin. Trends in biochemical sciences, 29(6).
 * 8) Cross, R. A. (2004). What kinesin does at roadblocks: the coordination mechanism for molecular walking ´. Molecular Biology, 23(1), 23-32.
 * Fan, D., Zheng, W., Hou, R., Li, F., & Wang, Z. (2008). Modeling Motility of the Kinesin Dimer from Molecular Properties of Individual Monomers †. Society, (11), 4733-4742.
 * 1) Fehr, A. N., Asbury, C. L., & Block, S. M. (2008). Kinesin Steps Do Not Alternate in Size. Health (San Francisco), 20-22.
 * 2) Gilbert, S., Webb, M., Brune, M., & Johnson, K. (1995). Pathway of processive ATP hydrolysis by kinesin. Nature, 373(6516), 671–676.
 * 3) Guydosh, N. R., & Block, S. M. (2006). Backsteps induced by nucleotide analogs suggest the front head of kinesin is gated by strain. PNAS, 103(21).
 * 4) Hackney, D. (1988). Kinesin ATPase: rate-limiting ADP release. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 85(17), 6314–6318. National Acad Sciences.
 * 5) Hackney, D. (1996). The kinetic cycles of myosin, kinesin, and dynein. Annual review of physiology, 58(1), 731–750. Annual Reviews.
 * 6) Hancock, W. O., & Howard, J. (1999). Kinesin’s processivity results from mechanical and chemical coordination between the ATP hydrolysis cycles of the two motor domains.
 * 7) Howard, J. (1996). The movement of kinesin along microtubules. Annual review of physiology, 58(1), 703–729. Annual Reviews.
 * 8) Hyeon, C., Klumpp, S., & Onuchic, J. N. (2009). Kinesin's backsteps under mechanical load. Physics, 1-34.
 * 9) Imafuku, Y., Thomas, N., & Tawada, K. (2009). Hopping and stalling of processive molecular motors. Journal of Theoretical Biology, (2002). Elsevier.
 * 10) Kaseda, K., Higuchi, H., & Hirose, K. (2003). Alternate fast and slow stepping of a heterodimeric kinesin molecule. Group, 5(12), 10-15.
 * 11) Kawaguchi, K., & Ishiwata, S. (2001). Nucleotide-dependent single- to double-headed binding of kinesin. Science (New York, N.Y.), 291(5504), 667-9.
 * 12) Klumpp, L., Hoenger, A., & Gilbert, S. (2004). Kinesin's second step. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 101(10), 3444–3449. National Acad Sciences.
 * Liu, M., Todd, B., & Sadus, R. (2005). Cooperativity in the motor activities of the ATP-fueled molecular motors. BBA-Proteins and Proteomics, 1752(2), 111–123. Elsevier.
 * 1) Rosenfeld, S., Fordyce, P., Jefferson, G., King, P., & Block, S. (2003). Stepping and Stretching HOW KINESIN USES INTERNAL STRAIN TO WALK PROCESSIVELY. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 278(20), 18550–18556. ASBMB.
 * 2) Schnitzer, M., Visscher, K. & Block, S. Force production by single kinesin motors. Nature cell biology 2, 718–723(2000)
 * 3) Svoboda, K. et al. 1993. "Direct observation of kinesin stepping by optical trapping interferometry." Group.
 * 4) Taniguchi, Yuichi, and Toshio Yanagida. 2008. "The forward and backward stepping processes of kinesin are gated by ATP binding." Biophysics 4: 11-18.
 * 5) Uemura, S., and others. 2003. "Loading direction regulates the affinity of ADP for kinesin." Nature Structural \& Molecular Biology 10(4): 308–311.