This new volume of Methods in Enzymology continues the legacy of this premier serial with quality chapters authored by leaders in the field
1. Isothermal Titration Calorimetry Measurements of Metal Ions
Binding to Proteins
Colette F. Quinn ,Margaret C. Carpenter, Molly L. Croteau and Dean
E. Wilcox
2. Assessing Coupled Protein Folding and Binding through
Temperature- Dependent Isothermal Titration Calorimetry
Debashish Sahu, Monique Bastidas, Chad W. Lawrence, William G.
Noid,and Scott A. Showalter
3. Fragment-Based Screening for Enzyme Inhibitors Using
Calorimetry
Michael I. Recht, Vicki Nienaber and Francisco E. Torres
4. Measuring Multivalent Binding Interactions by Isothermal
Titration Calorimetry
Tarun K. Dam, Melanie L Talaga, Ni Fan and Curtis F.
Brewer
5. Calorimetric and Spectroscopic Analysis of the Thermal Stability
of Short Duplex DNA-Containing Sugar and Base-Modified
Nucleotides
Kareem Fakhfakh, Curtis B. Hughesman, A. Louise Creagh, Vincent Kao
and Charles Haynes
6. Calorimetric Quantification of Cyclodextrin-Mediated Detergent
Extraction for Membrane-Protein Reconstitution
Martin Textor and Sandro Keller
7. Extending ITC to Kinetics with KinITC
Philippe Dumas, Eric Ennifar, Cyrielle Da Veiga, Guillaume Bec,
William Palau, Carmelo Di Primo,Angel Piñeiro, Juan Sabin, Eva
Muñoz and Javier Rial
8. Measuring the Kinetics of Molecular Association by Isothermal
Titration Calorimetry
Kirk A. Vander Meulen, Scott Horowitz, Raymond C. Trievel, and
Samuel E. Butcher
9. Isothermal Titration Calorimetry to Characterize Enzymatic
Reactions
Luca Mazzei, Stefano Ciurli and Barbara Zambelli
10. Avoiding Buffer Interference in Itc Experiments: A Case Study
from the Analysis of Entropy Driven Reactions of
Glucose-6-Phosphate Dehydrogenase
M. Lucia Bianconi
11. ITC Methods for Assessing Buffer/Protein Interactions from the
Perturbation of Steady-State Kinetics: A Reactivity Study of
Homoprotocatechuate 2,3-Dioxygenase
Kate L. Henderson, Delta K. Boyles, Vu H. Le, Edwin A. Lewis and
Joseph P.Emerson
12. Modern Analysis of Protein Folding by Differential Scanning
Calorimetry
Beatriz Ibarra-Molero, Athi N. Naganathan, Jose M. Sanchez-Ruiz and
Victor Muñoz
13. A Guide to Differential Scanning Calorimetry of Membrane and
Soluble Proteins in Detergents
Zhengrong Yang and Christie G. Brouillette
14. Orthogonal Methods for Characterizing the Unfolding of
Therapeutic Monoclonal Antibodies: Differential Scanning
Calorimetry, Isothermal Chemical Denaturation and Intrinsic
Fluorescence with Concomitant Static Light Scattering
Deniz B. Temel, Pavel Landsman and Mark L. Brader
15. IATC, DSC, and PPC Analysis of Reversible and Multi-State
Structural Transition of Cytochrome c
Shun-ichi Kidokoro and Shigeyoshi Nakamura
16. The Complementarity of the Loop to the Stem in DNA Pseudoknots
Gives Rise to Local TAT Base-Triplets
Calliste Reiling-Steffensmeier and Luis A. Marky
17. A High-Throughput Biological Calorimetry Core: Steps to
Startup, Run, and Maintain a Multi-User Facility
Neela H. Yennawar, Julia A. Fecko, Scott A. Showalter and Philip C.
Bevilacqua
Prof. Andrew Feig joined the WSU faculty in the Department of Chemistry in 2006. He is a biochemist who oversees a laboratory that studies bacterial gene regulation by small non-coding RNAs and the biochemistry, chemical biology, and biophysics of Clostridium difficile toxins A & B. He has worked extensively on structural rearrangements of RNA and RNA protein interactions with an emphasis on the biochemistry and biophysics of those processes. He has a long-standing interested in heat capacity changes associated with these structural transitions and their impact on the regulation of biological processes. Professor Feig is a 2002 Cottrell Scholar, was Recipient of the WSU Career Development Chair (08/09), the CLAS Teaching Award (2012) and the WSU President’s Award for Excellence in Teaching (2013). In 2015 he was named PCSUM Michigan Distinguished Professor of the Year. Professor Feig earned his B.S. in Chemistry from Yale University (1990) and his Ph.D. in Chemistry from MIT (1995) working with Professor Stephen J. Lippard. He worked as a post-doctoral fellow at University of Colorado, Boulder (1995-1999) in the laboratory of Olke C. Uhlenbeck.
Praise for the Series:
"Should be on the shelves of all libraries in the world as a whole
collection." --Chemistry in Industry
"The work most often consulted in the lab." --Enzymologia
"The Methods in Enzymology series represents the gold-standard."
--Neuroscience
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