Dunn:Projects: Difference between revisions

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m (New page: <div style="padding: 10px; width: 820px; border: 5px solid yellowgreen;"> =<center>Welcome to the Dunn Lab homepage!</center>= Although the homepage is still under construction, we will be...)
 
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=<center>Welcome to the Dunn Lab homepage!</center>=
Although the homepage is still under construction, we will be adding destinations to the links above sooner rather than later. Until then, feel free to peruse the working links that are available as well as our other [http://www.stanford.edu/~ardunn/home.html site].


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<div style="padding: 10px; width: 820px; border: 5px solid yellowgreen;">
=<center>Understanding how myosin uses chemical energy to generate force and motion.</center>=
=<center>Welcome to the Dunn Lab homepage!</center>=
Although the homepage is still under construction, we will be adding destinations to the links above sooner rather than later. Until then, feel free to peruse the working links that are available as well as our other [http://www.stanford.edu/~ardunn/home.html site].


Conventional myosin generates force in muscle, but other myosins play diverse biological roles, including transporting cargo throughout the cell. We will use sophisticated biophysical techniques to directly observe the motion of single myosin molecules in order to better understand how myosin converts chemical energy into useful motion. This project also has a more universal applicability. Recent work suggests that enzymes in general may derive their incredible catalytic ability by coupling protein motion to bond making and breaking. Single-molecule measurements on myosin offer a potentially powerful way to test this idea.


<div style="padding: 10px; width: 820px; border: 5px solid yellowgreen;">
=<center>Design of new motor proteins</center>=
=<center>Welcome to the Dunn Lab homepage!</center>=
 
Although the homepage is still under construction, we will be adding destinations to the links above sooner rather than later. Until then, feel free to peruse the working links that are available as well as our other [http://www.stanford.edu/~ardunn/home.html site].
Artificial motor proteins have wide-ranging potential applications in fields like bottom-up nanofabrication, medical diagnostics, and responsive “smart” materials. Our group will use iterative rounds of protein design, screening, and single-molecule characterization to generate molecular motors with novel capabilities. Our work in creating novel motor proteins will test the validity and usefulness of the models of protein physics developed in Project 1.
 
 
=<center>Measurement of force and motion inside living cells</center>=

Revision as of 22:02, 19 July 2009

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Understanding how myosin uses chemical energy to generate force and motion.

Conventional myosin generates force in muscle, but other myosins play diverse biological roles, including transporting cargo throughout the cell. We will use sophisticated biophysical techniques to directly observe the motion of single myosin molecules in order to better understand how myosin converts chemical energy into useful motion. This project also has a more universal applicability. Recent work suggests that enzymes in general may derive their incredible catalytic ability by coupling protein motion to bond making and breaking. Single-molecule measurements on myosin offer a potentially powerful way to test this idea.

Design of new motor proteins

Artificial motor proteins have wide-ranging potential applications in fields like bottom-up nanofabrication, medical diagnostics, and responsive “smart” materials. Our group will use iterative rounds of protein design, screening, and single-molecule characterization to generate molecular motors with novel capabilities. Our work in creating novel motor proteins will test the validity and usefulness of the models of protein physics developed in Project 1.


Measurement of force and motion inside living cells