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Two-dimensional studies of human lipoproteins

Human lipoproteins are a very interesting example to apply two-dimensional spectroscopy, because they are composed of lipids and proteins, like membranes, and they have large proteins, like apoB 100, which is a single polypeptide of 4536 aminoacyl residues. [Pg.158]

Arrondo, J.L.R. and Goni, F. M. (1997). Infrared spectroscopic studies of membrane lipids. In Biomolecular Structure andDynamics, Vergoten, G. and Theophanides, T. eds, pp. 229—242. Kluwer Academic Dordrecht. [Pg.161]

Arrondo, JT.R. and Goni, F. M. (1999). Structure and dynamics of membrane proteins as studied by infrared spectroscopy. Prog. Biophys. Mol. Biol. 72 367—405. [Pg.161]

Arrondo, J.L.R., Iloro, I., Aguirre, J. and Goni, F.M. (2004). A two-dimensional IR spectroscopic (2D-IR) simulation of protein conformational changes. Spectroscopy 18 49—58. [Pg.161]

Banuelos, S., Arrondo, J. L. R., Goni, F. M. and Pifat, G. (1995). Surface-core relationships in human low density hpoprotein as studied hy infrared spectroscopy. J. Biol. Chem. 270 9192-9196. [Pg.161]


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