News archive for Biorecognition
This week, Maiken Fridal Trones is joining us as a MSc student in our lab in Bergen. She will be working on some interesting mutants of Plasmodium actin.
Malaria is one of the most devastating infectious diseases in the world. The parasites causing malaria move by gliding, for which force is generated by an unusual actomyosin motor. We have determined high-resolution cryo-EM structures of the parasite actomyosin and actin filaments and a lower resolution reconstructions of the myosin light chains in the complex.
A large EU consortium got funding to integrated services for combatting current and future infectious disease outbreaks. BiSS is part of this consortium and offers fragment screening.
- March 2025 (1)
- August 2023 (1)
- July 2023 (1)
- March 2023 (4)
- February 2023 (1)
- December 2022 (3)
- November 2022 (1)
- October 2022 (5)
- September 2022 (2)
- June 2022 (1)
- May 2022 (4)
- April 2022 (3)
- March 2022 (7)
- November 2021 (3)
- August 2021 (1)
- June 2021 (1)
- May 2021 (1)
- April 2021 (1)
- January 2021 (1)
- December 2020 (1)
- March 2020 (2)
- February 2020 (1)
- January 2020 (1)
- December 2019 (1)
- September 2019 (2)
- August 2019 (1)
- May 2019 (1)
- April 2019 (1)
- March 2019 (2)
- December 2018 (1)
- November 2018 (1)
- October 2018 (1)
- September 2018 (1)
- October 2017 (1)
- March 2017 (1)
- January 2017 (2)
- December 2016 (1)
- November 2016 (1)
- September 2016 (1)
- August 2016 (3)
- June 2015 (1)
- January 2014 (1)
- November 2013 (1)
- October 2013 (2)
- June 2013 (1)
- September 2012 (1)
- March 2012 (1)
- November 2011 (1)
- October 2011 (1)
- April 2011 (1)
- December 2010 (1)
- January 2009 (1)