Team:MIT phage context
From 2010.igem.org
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<b>RELEVANT LITERATURE</b> | <b>RELEVANT LITERATURE</b> | ||
<ul> | <ul> | ||
- | <li>Rackonjac and Model. | + | <li>Rackonjac and Model. "Roles of pIII is Filamentous Phage Assembly". Journal of Molecular Biology. 1998.</li> |
- | <li>Barbas III, et al. | + | <li>Barbas III, et al. "Phage Display: A Laboratory Manual". Cold Spring Harbor Press. 2001.</li> |
- | <li>Wang, et al. | + | <li>Wang, et al. "Adapter-directed display: a modular design for shuttling display on phage surfaces". Journal of Molecular Biology. 2010.</li> |
- | <li>Smith and Petrenko. | + | <li>Smith and Petrenko. "Phage Display". Chemical Review. 1997.</li> |
- | <li>Sweeney, et al. | + | <li>Sweeney, et al. "Assembly of Multimeric Phage Nanostructures Through Leucine Zipper Interactions". Biotechnology and Bioengineering. 2006.</li> |
- | <li>Roth, et al. | + | <li>Roth, et al. "A Minimized M13 Coat Protein Defines the Requirements for Assembly into the Bacteriophage Particle". Journal of Molecular Biology. 2002.</li> |
- | <li>Weiss and Sidhu. | + | <li>Weiss and Sidhu. "Design and Evolution of Artificial M13 Coat Proteins". Journal of Molecular Biology. 2000.</li> |
- | <li>Branden and Tooze. | + | <li>Branden and Tooze. "Introduction to Protein Structure". Garland Press. 1999.</li> |
+ | <li>Willis et al. "Biologically templated organic polymers with nanoscale order". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA. 2007.</li> | ||
</ul> | </ul> | ||
Revision as of 19:51, 27 October 2010
hairy cells and polymerizing phage - context |
WORK FROM OTHER IGEM TEAMS The following teams have used some component of our phage system previously. No other teams have used our method of polyphage with incorporated leucine zippers for polymerization (nor is it present in the literature).
RELEVANT LITERATURE
← Results
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