Covalent capture: a natural complement to self-assembly

scientific article

Covalent capture: a natural complement to self-assembly is …
instance of (P31):
review articleQ7318358
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.1016/J.CBPA.2004.10.001
P698PubMed publication ID15556403

P2093author name stringJeffrey D Hartgerink
P433issue6
P921main subjectself-assemblyQ910150
P304page(s)604-609
P577publication date2004-12-01
P1433published inCurrent Opinion in Chemical BiologyQ15758415
P1476titleCovalent capture: a natural complement to self-assembly
P478volume8

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q37394041Covalent capture: merging covalent and noncovalent synthesis
Q47400913Design Principles of Peptide Based Self-Assembled Nanomaterials.
Q57915637Fibrous Nanostructures from the Self-Assembly of Designed Repeat Protein Modules
Q33962220Hydrogel formation upon photoinduced covalent capture of macrocycle stacks from dynamic combinatorial libraries.
Q46173279Lessons learned from protein aggregation: toward technological and biomedical applications.
Q34316215Multifunctional materials through modular protein engineering
Q33961066NCAD, a database integrating the intrinsic conformational preferences of non-coded amino acids
Q92407881Peptide Tectonics: Encoded Structural Complementarity Dictates Programmable Self-Assembly
Q37806710Peptide-mediated cancer targeting of nanoconjugates
Q57355937SWCNT PEG-eggs: Single-walled carbon nanotubes in biocompatible shell-crosslinked micelles
Q37385435Science of nanofibrous scaffold fabrication: strategies for next generation tissue-engineering scaffolds
Q42689898Stabilization of peptide vesicles by introducing inter-peptide disulfide bonds.
Q37934797Strategies and tactics for the metal-directed synthesis of rotaxanes, knots, catenanes, and higher order links

Search more.