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Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscop nucleic acids

In fact, a tremendous amount of information is available on the structures of biological macromolecules descriptions of structures of proteins and nucleic acids make up major portions of modern textbooks in biochemistry and molecular biology. The Protein Data Bank and the Nucleic Acid Database are online archives that contain sequence and structural data on thousands of specific molecules and complexes of molecules. This structural information comes from in vitro experiments, with structures inferred from the x-ray diffraction patterns of crystallized molecules, spectroscopic measurements using multi-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance, and a host of other methodologies. [Pg.240]

Improvements in column technology, detector sensitivity and the development of new detection systems, have made possible the routine separation of picomole quantities of nucleic acid components in complex physiological matrices. The very sensitivity of most LC systems, however, which is invaluable in the analysis of biological samples, is often the limiting factor because of inadequate or ambiguous identification methods. Although tremendous advances have been made in the on-line combination of HPLC with spectroscopic techniques [e.g., mass spectrometry, Fourier transform infrared (FT/IR), nuclear magnetic resonance], their application has not become routine in most biochemical and biomedical laboratories. [Pg.22]


See other pages where Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscop nucleic acids is mentioned: [Pg.327]    [Pg.3]    [Pg.307]    [Pg.6203]    [Pg.6202]    [Pg.327]    [Pg.314]    [Pg.410]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.264 , Pg.265 ]




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