Team:Slovenia/PROJECT/proof/popfret/back

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A green fluorescent protein (GFP), first isolated in the 60s from a jellyfish <em>Aequorea victoria,&nbsp;</em>has been mutated in many different ways leading to a wide variety of fluorescent proteins with novel fluorescent properties.
A green fluorescent protein (GFP), first isolated in the 60s from a jellyfish <em>Aequorea victoria,&nbsp;</em>has been mutated in many different ways leading to a wide variety of fluorescent proteins with novel fluorescent properties.
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[[Image:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/7b/FPbeachTsien.jpg|thumb|center|700px|'''San Diego beach scene drawn with an eight color palette of bacterial colonies expressing fluorescent proteins derived from GFP and the red-fluorescent coral protein dsRed. ([http://www.tsienlab.ucsd.edu/Publications/Tsien%202009%20Angew%20Chem%20-%20Exploiting%20Fluourscent%20Protein%20Paintbox%20-%20Nobel%20Lecture.pdf Roger Y. Tsien, Nobel Lecture 2008]) ''']]
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[[Image:FPbeachTsien.jpg|thumb|center|700px|'''San Diego beach scene drawn with an eight color palette of bacterial colonies expressing fluorescent proteins derived from GFP and the red-fluorescent coral protein dsRed. ([http://www.tsienlab.ucsd.edu/Publications/Tsien%202009%20Angew%20Chem%20-%20Exploiting%20Fluourscent%20Protein%20Paintbox%20-%20Nobel%20Lecture.pdf Roger Y. Tsien, Nobel Lecture 2008]) ''']]

Revision as of 15:10, 27 October 2010

Chuck Norris facts:




A green fluorescent protein (GFP), first isolated in the 60s from a jellyfish Aequorea victoria, has been mutated in many different ways leading to a wide variety of fluorescent proteins with novel fluorescent properties.

San Diego beach scene drawn with an eight color palette of bacterial colonies expressing fluorescent proteins derived from GFP and the red-fluorescent coral protein dsRed. (Roger Y. Tsien, Nobel Lecture 2008)