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Showing 1–4 of 4 results
Advanced filters: Author: "Carsten Schultz" Clear advanced filters
  • Chemical biology is well defined at its core—chemistry helping to answer biological questions—yet the boundaries are rather fuzzy. What are the differences between chemical biology and pharmacology? Is intracellular imaging a branch of chemical biology, and what about screening libraries? At Chemical Biology 2008, held in Heidelberg in October, participants heard presentations covering all these topics and more.

    • Maja Köhn
    • Carsten Schultz
    News & Views
    Nature Chemical Biology
    Volume: 5, P: 66-69
  • Because of the large number of phospholipids, their highly active metabolism and our lack of understanding of protein-lipid specificity, lipid signaling is a particularly challenging subject to study. Help might come from new tools that will allow us to follow and manipulate lipids and lipid-binding proteins in living cells.

    • Carsten Schultz
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature Chemical Biology
    Volume: 6, P: 473-475
  • Sensors and reporters are among the most exciting tools used in cell biology. Now, they are increasingly used in developmental biology and medicine because they allow us to spy on events in living cells and organisms, including humans, in real time and with high spatial resolution. Herein, we discuss multiple design options for fluorescent sensors and reporters as well as strategies to improve their properties and increase development.

    • Edward A Lemke
    • Carsten Schultz
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature Chemical Biology
    Volume: 7, P: 480-483