/PRNewswire/ Researchers at Kanazawa University report in ACS Nano how high-speed atomic force microscopy can be used to study the biomolecular mechanisms.
Intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) play significant roles in various biological events. Due to their non-intuitive physical structures, analysis and understanding of their dynamics have proven challenging. Innovative atomic force microscopy techniques have emerged as a potential tool to gain insights into the structure of IDPs.
In a study published in Applied Physics Letters, researchers created a differential-based ultrafast amplitude detection method devoid of any intrinsic latency with the basic trigonometric theorem.
/PRNewswire/ In a study recently published in the journal Applied Materials and Interfaces researchers from Kanazawa University use advanced atomic force.