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Full-Text Articles in Engineering

A Tale Of Two Protein Switches: Engineering, Characterizing, And Understanding A Novel And A Natural Switch, James Vincent Price Dec 2013

A Tale Of Two Protein Switches: Engineering, Characterizing, And Understanding A Novel And A Natural Switch, James Vincent Price

Doctoral Dissertations

Throughout nature, many proteins provide a specific function in response to some input signal (e.g., phosyphorylation, pH, etc.), a process that is oftentimes described as switching a protein “on” or “off.” The advent of protein engineering has allowed for the creation and understanding of chimeric proteins for uses in a number of applications such as therapeutics, biosensors and energy production. Two proteins, hemagglutinin (HA) of fowl plague influenza virus and a chimeric protein comprising a fusion between the LFA-1 I domain and the EF3 and EF4 hands of calmodulin, have been investigated in this dissertation. Both of these proteins undergo …


Filomicelle Functionalization And Stability Studies With Applications For Malaria Treatments, Megan Haoyun Yang Aug 2013

Filomicelle Functionalization And Stability Studies With Applications For Malaria Treatments, Megan Haoyun Yang

Masters Theses

Malaria is an infectious disease caused by the parasite Plasmodium that is transmitted by mosquitoes. It is estimated that malaria causes 1.1 million deaths per year globally. While anti-malarial drugs have been effective in treating infected individuals, new methodologies are needed. Treatments may benefit from approaches that encapsulate drugs in vehicles allowing for more effective delivery. To this end, the use of targeted drug delivery vehicles called filomicelles to treat malaria is proposed.

Certain amphiphilic diblock copolymers self-assemble into filomicelles (long and stable cylindrical micelles), which are capable of carrying hydrophobic drugs in the bodies of rodents. It is shown …


Application Of Synthetic Biology For Increasing Anaerobic Biodiesel Production In Escherichia Coli, Michael Christopher Wierzbicki Aug 2013

Application Of Synthetic Biology For Increasing Anaerobic Biodiesel Production In Escherichia Coli, Michael Christopher Wierzbicki

Masters Theses

The ever-increasing demand for transportation biofuels requires new and novel approaches to solve the complexities associated with efficient biofuel production. Ethanol, the most common biofuel, has physical limitation associated with difficulty of separations and issues with water contamination and as such is not a long-term transportation fuel solution. (Lou & Singh, 2010; Wheals, Basso, Alves, & Amorim, 1999) Biodiesel is seen as a possible alternative to ethanol due to its hydrophobicity and also has comparable energy density and cetane number to its petroleum derived counterpart. (Kalscheuer, Stölting, & Steinbüchel, 2006) Because of feedstock limitations, biodiesel produced from vegetable oils is …


Industrial Robustness: Understanding The Mechanism Of Tolerance For The Populus Hydrolysate Tolerant Strain Of Clostridium Thermocellum, Jessica Leigh Linville May 2013

Industrial Robustness: Understanding The Mechanism Of Tolerance For The Populus Hydrolysate Tolerant Strain Of Clostridium Thermocellum, Jessica Leigh Linville

Doctoral Dissertations

An industrially robust microorganism that can efficiently degrade and convert lignocellulosic biomass into ethanol and next-generation fuels is required to economically produce future sustainable liquid transportation fuels. The anaerobic, thermophilic, cellulolytic bacterium Clostridium thermocellum is a candidate microorganism for such conversions but it, like many bacteria, is sensitive to potential toxic inhibitors developed in the hydrolysate produced during biomass processing. Microbial processes leading to tolerance of the inhibitory compounds found in the pretreated biomass hydrolysate are likely complex and involve multiple genes. In this study, a 17.5% v/v Populus hydrolysate tolerant mutant strain of C. thermocellum was developed by directed …


Characterization Of Influenza Hemagglutinin Mutants For The Elucidation Of Key Residues’ Effect On Activation, Morgan Baltz May 2013

Characterization Of Influenza Hemagglutinin Mutants For The Elucidation Of Key Residues’ Effect On Activation, Morgan Baltz

Chancellor’s Honors Program Projects

No abstract provided.