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Structure and Dynamics of Confined Polymers - Proceedings of the NATO Advanced Research Workshop on Biological, Biophysical & Theoretical Aspects of Polymer Structure and Transport Bikal, Hungary 20-25 June 1999 (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2002)
Loot Price: R5,467
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Structure and Dynamics of Confined Polymers - Proceedings of the NATO Advanced Research Workshop on Biological, Biophysical & Theoretical Aspects of Polymer Structure and Transport Bikal, Hungary 20-25 June 1999 (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2002)
Series: NATO Science Partnership Subseries: 3, 87
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Polymers are essential to biology because they can have enough
stable degrees of freedom to store the molecular code of heredity
and to express the sequences needed to manufacture new molecules.
Through these they perform or control virtually every function in
life. Although some biopolymers are created and spend their entire
career in the relatively large free space inside cells or
organelles, many biopolymers must migrate through a narrow
passageway to get to their targeted destination. This suggests the
questions: How does confining a polymer affect its behavior and
function? What does that tell us about the interactions between the
monomers that comprise the polymer and the molecules that confine
it? Can we design and build devices that mimic the functions of
these nanoscale systems? The NATO Advanced Research Workshop
brought together for four days in Bikal, Hungary over forty experts
in experimental and theoretical biophysics, molecular biology,
biophysical chemistry, and biochemistry interested in these
questions. Their papers collected in this book provide insight on
biological processes involving confinement and form a basis for new
biotechnological applications using polymers. In his paper Edmund
DiMarzio asks: What is so special about polymers? Why are polymers
so prevalent in living things? The chemist says the reason is that
a protein made of N amino acids can have any of 20 different kinds
at each position along the chain, resulting in 20 N different
polymers, and that the complexity of life lies in this variety.
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