In a paper published in ACS Nano, researchers at Washington University in St. Louis outline how they used a chemical probe to light up interlocking peptides. Th
In a paper published in ACS Nano, researchers at Washington University in St. Louis outline how they used a chemical probe to light up interlocking peptides. Th
Comprehending the basics of molecular interaction in the real, chaotic, dynamic setting of a living body is a challenge that has to be surpassed so as to deal with a variety of diseases, such as Alzheimer’s.
A new imaging technology from the lab of Matthew Lew in the McKelvey School of Engineering at Washington University in St. Louis uses polarized "optical vortices" to provide a detailed, dynamic view of molecules in motion.