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“Shotgun” method exposes cells’ sugar coatings

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Almost every type of cell in the human body is covered in sugar molecules called glycans, but scientists have found that analyzing and understanding these molecules have proved difficult because of their structural complexity. A new method called shotgun glycomics could make it easier for scientists to understand the information encoded in the sugars and the sugars’ ability to facilitate interactions with other proteins. Adapting gene chip microarray technology, researchers at Emory University School of Medicine have developed a new chemical method for attaching a fluorescent dye...Read full article

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    Published: February 2011
    Americasautoimmune responseBasic ScienceBiophotonicsBioScanbrain-derived lipidsCancer CellsCoatingsEmory University School of MedicineEureka program for high-risk researchfluorescent dyegene chip microarrayGeorgiaglass slidesglycansGlycomics Centerhuman autoimmune disorderslipidsLyme diseaseNational Institute of General Medical SciencesNational Institutes of HealthNewsNIHproteinsred blood cellsRichard Cummingsself-reactive antibodiesshotgun glycomicstumor cells

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