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As biological phenomena are fundamentally defined at the molecular
level, it is critically important to understand the structures and
dynamics of biomolecules and their complexes. The growing power of
structural biology is therefore playing an increasingly important
role in cancer biology; both in defining the structures and functions
of cancer-related protein and nucleic acid complexes, and in
providing a starting point for the "rational" design of new
therapeutics.
The University of Utah Medical Center has active research groups
studying cancer biology using each of the three high-resolution
methods of modern structural biology: X-ray crystallography, NMR, and
cryo-electron microscopy. State of the art instrumentation is housed
in Centers for Biomolecular NMR spectroscopy (Varian 500 and 600 MHz
NMR spectrometers), X-ray crystallography (RU200 rotating anode X-ray
sources with R-Axis image plate detectors), and Electron Microscopy
(Philips Tecnai 12 and Hitachi 7100 cryo-TEM diffraction systems).
These facilities are maintained by specialized research groups, and
collaborative studies with the larger cancer biology community
strongly encouraged. Excellent facilities are also available for
complementary biophysical studies, including mass spectrometry,
optical, fluorescence, CD, and surface plasmon resonance
spectroscopies, microcalorimetry, and analytical
ultracentrifugation.
Participating Faculty
Sherwood Casjens
- We are interested in the mechanisms by which large multi-subunit protein and
nucleic acid macromolecular structures assemble.
We are currently studying catalysis of macromolecular assembly by proteins
that do not become part of the structure in the bacteriophage P22 model
system.
We use a combination of genetics, genomics, biochemistry and protein
structure determination to study bacteriophage P22 assembly.
Christopher P. Hill
- We are interested in how protein molecules associate to form complexes
and machines that function in processes such as the assembly and maturation
of HIV particles and the regulation of intracellular proteolysis. These
studies are aimed at understanding the regulation of fundamental cellular
events such as cell-cycle progression. Our primary approach is to
determine the three-dimensional structure of individual proteins and
complexes by the techniques of x-ray crystallography.
Wes Sundquist
- Our laboratory is interested in understanding the process of HIV assembly
and its role in facilitating viral replication. HIV assembly is a
challenging problem because it occurs in multiple stages, involves both
cellular and viral factors, and produces particles that are highly organized,
but not strictly regular. We have therefore adopted a multidisciplinary
approach to studying the problem of viral assembly, using both classical
structural methods (NMR, X-ray crystallography, and electron microscopy), as
well as biochemical and genetic approaches.
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