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| <center> <size="+1"><a href="http://genomebiology.com/2006/7/11/R109">NEWS: OUR YEAST POLY
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| P SCREEN HAS JUST BEEN PUBLISHED!</a>
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Revision as of 01:48, 9 January 2007
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Florian M. Freimoser, PhD
Institute of Plant Sciences
Biochemistry and Physiology of Plants
ETH Zurich, LFW D46.1
Universitätsstr. 2
CH-8092 Zurich
Switzerland
Tel: +41 +44 632 38 44
Fax: +41 +44 632 10 44
Please also visit our other web site!
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The molecule we study is so plain
the inorganic polyphosphate chain
Our group studies a simple
molecule: inorganic
polyphosphate (poly P).
Poly P is a linear polymer that consists of a variable number of
phosphate residues
(from three to more than a thousand) that are
linked by energy-rich phosphoanhydride bonds. It occurs ubiquitously in all living cells and regulates many molecular and biological processes. Nevertheless, poly P is scarcely studied and little is known about poly P metabolism and its exact molecular functions; especially in eukaryotes. In our group we have developed methods to quantify poly P, to stain and localize poly P and to screen for poly P binding proteins. We are using these tools to investigate poly P metabolism and functions in fungi, plants and algae. However, at the moment our main efforts are devoted to the study of poly P metabolism in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae and of poly P in fungal cell walls.
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