Reviews & Analysis

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  • The structure of the regulatory domain of scallop myosin at 2.8 Å resolution reveals secrets whose significance goes beyond the immediate implications for myosin-linked regulation.

    • Clive R. Bagshaw
    • Michael J. Sutcliffe
    News & Views
  • The structure of the lectin and epidermal growth factor-related domains of E-selectin, an adhesion molecule involved with inflammation, provide further insight into selectin-carbohydrate interactions.

    • Laurence A. Lasky
    News & Views
  • The rate of refolding of cytochrome c is very rapid in the absence of non-native interactions , which raises questions about the general significance of both the rates and intermediates of protein folding that are normally observed.

    • Thomas E Creighton
    News & Views
  • The structure of bi-functional thymidylate synthase-dihydrofolate reductase suggests that substrate may be channelled accross the surface of the protein between the two active sites.

    • Robert M. Stroud
    News & Views
  • Hhal methyltransferase, caught in the act of methylating a cytosine on a DNA substrate, reveals how the enzyme overcomes the problem of chemically modifying bases in the relatively inaccessible environment of the DNA duplex.

    • Simon E V Phillips
    News & Views
  • A wealth of prediction about the structure of spectrin has now been confirmed by the x-ray crystallographic analysis of a dimer of spectrin repeat units. The data provide a structural rationale for various haemolytic anaemias.

    • Walter B Gratzer
    News & Views
  • The common topology of the matrix metalloproteinase family, and details of the structures of individual members, will intensify efforts to develop drugs for diseases such as arthritis and cancer.

    • Tom L Blundell
    News & Views
  • High-resolution structure analysis and directed mutagenesis experiments may at last be brought into step by the use of functional group analogues that alter individual atoms

    • Paul B. Sigler
    News & Views
  • Biochemical techniques provide a detailed picture of how the catalytic core of the Tetrahymena ribozyme interacts with the surface of its helical substrate.

    • François Michel
    • Eric Westhof
    News & Views
  • To address important biological questions structural studies must be combined with quantitative methods of measurement and analysis derived from physics, chemistry and mathematics.

    • Stephen K. Burley
    News & Views