Stowell_1998_Curr.Opin.Struct.Biol_8_595

Reference

Title : Macromolecular structure determination by electron microscopy: new advances and recent results - Stowell_1998_Curr.Opin.Struct.Biol_8_595
Author(s) : Stowell MH , Miyazawa A , Unwin N
Ref : Current Opinion in Structural Biology , 8 :595 , 1998
Abstract :

Electron microscopy is undergoing a mini-renaissance, as a number of biological systems are yielding to higher resolution analysis as a result of advances in instrumentation, specimen preparation and image-processing technology. The atomic structure of tubulin has now been solved, crucial elements of secondary structure have recently been revealed in several membrane proteins (rhodopsin, gap junctions, aquaporin, and Ca2+ and H+ ATPases) and in a virus particle, and macromolecular complexes are being seen in increasingly fine detail. This growth has been enhanced further by the ability to combine structures of macromolecular complexes derived by electron microscopy with X-ray structures of their components, in order to reconstruct molecular machines and large multiprotein complexes in immense detail.

PubMedSearch : Stowell_1998_Curr.Opin.Struct.Biol_8_595
PubMedID: 9818263

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Citations formats

Stowell MH, Miyazawa A, Unwin N (1998)
Macromolecular structure determination by electron microscopy: new advances and recent results
Current Opinion in Structural Biology 8 :595

Stowell MH, Miyazawa A, Unwin N (1998)
Current Opinion in Structural Biology 8 :595