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Australian Journal of Chemistry
  An international journal for chemical science
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From Penicillin to the Ribosome: Revolutions in the Determination and Use of Molecular Structure in Chemistry and Biology

Edward N. Baker

School of Biological Sciences and Department of Chemistry, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand (e-mail: ted.baker@auckland.ac.nz).


Abstract

A revolution in structural analysis is in progress in the biological sciences that parallels a similar revolution that took place in chemistry 40–50 years ago. This has major implications for chemistry, offering exciting opportunities at the interface between chemistry and biology. The advances are driven by the value of structural information in biology, for understanding biological function, and for applications in structure-based drug design and structural genomics. Two directions are apparent: towards technically challenging biological structures and assemblies, typified by the potassium channel and the ribosome; and towards high-throughput structure determination of many, smaller, proteins, as in structural genomics. In this review, the advances in molecular biology and in structure determination by X-ray crystallography that make these developments possible are discussed, together with appropriate examples.

Australian Journal of Chemistry 57(9) 829–836    doi:10.1071/CH04090
Submitted: 1 April 2004    Accepted: 9 July 2004    Published: 1 September 2004





   
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