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Dedicated to the development of novel array technologies for proteomics research, the proteomics center focuses on regulatory proteins, particularly transcription factors to better understand various aspects of sleep biology.
The core serves the greater university community, University of North Carolina - Chapel Hill, by providing a resource for training, education, and consultation in modern proteomic techniques.
MIPS currently have two Proteomics projects. One is dedicated to the proteomic analysis of pathogenic bacteria while the other aims at process optimization and development of improved production logs for Proteomics of mammalian tissues.
Established by scientists from the Weizmann Institute of Science, the center provides its unique three-dimensional proteomics structure capability to Israeli academia and industry.
The center focuses on improving existing and developing new proteomics technologies related to the adaptive changes in protein signaling that occur in response to substance abuse.
The Proteomics Center will bring together faculty with highly regarded research programs in vascular biology, hematopoiesis, and hypertension with faculty who are leaders in designing the cell permeable synthetic biomolecule delivery systems that hold enormous promise for developing entirely new strategies for disease treatment.
With a special focus on structural proteomics to determine experimental structures of all proteins, the proteomics group is fully equipped with state-of-the-art instrumentation for high throughput cloning, protein production and characterization, as well as structure determination by both NMR spectroscopic and X-ray crystallographic methods.
The center's mission is to apply state-of-the-art methods and to develop new approaches and techniques to investigate the proteomics of adaptation to ischemia and hypoxia, a biological process of general relevance to heart, lung and blood diseases.