Difference between revisions of "Dr. Alex Rich Laboratory"

From Christoph's Personal Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
 
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
[[Image:Christoph MIT.jpg|thumb|right|Me at my desk at MIT]]
 
[[Image:Christoph MIT.jpg|thumb|right|Me at my desk at MIT]]
The '''Dr. Alex Rich Laboratory''' is where I did scientific research during Summer 2002/December 2002. It was located in the Department of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA, Summer 2002/December 2002.
+
The '''Dr. Alex Rich Laboratory''' is where I did scientific research during Summer 2002/December 2002. It was located in the Department of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), USA, Summer 2002/December 2002.
  
 
==Research==
 
==Research==
In 1979, Rich and co-workers at MIT accidentally grew a crystal of [[Z-DNA]]. Because of my research at OSU on Z-DNA and its biological role and because Dr. Rich is one of the leading experts on Z-DNA, I went to work for him at MIT. Our collaboration resulted in a paper published on Z-DNA and a possible biological role:
+
In 1979, Rich and co-workers at MIT accidentally grew a crystal of [[Z-DNA]]. Because of my research at OSU on Z-DNA and its biological role and because Dr. Rich is one of the leading experts on Z-DNA, I went to work for him at MIT.
*'''P. Christoph Champ''', Sandor Maurice, Jeffery M. Vargason, Tracy Camp, and P. Shing Ho (2004). Distributions of Z-DNA and nuclear factor I in human chromosome 22: a model for coupled transcriptional regulation. ''Nucleic Acids Research, 32(22):6501-6510''.
+
 
 +
In order to further study the biological role of Z-DNA in the regulation of transcription in various organisms, an experiment was designed to test just this. I ran a microarray of all open reading frames (ORFs) in yeast and measured the role of those ORFs having Zα-binding protein in
 +
solution (which should bind near their transcriptional start sites, if our hypothesis is correct) against the wild type. These were run on Affymetrix GeneChips and analyzed with proprietary software from Affymetrix.
 +
 
 +
Our collaboration resulted in a paper published on Z-DNA and a possible biological role:
 +
*'''P. Christoph Champ''', Sandor Maurice, Jeffery M. Vargason, Tracy Camp, and P. Shing Ho (2004). "Distributions of Z-DNA and nuclear factor I in human chromosome 22: a model for coupled transcriptional regulation". ''Nucleic Acids Research, 32(22):6501-6510''.
 +
 
 +
==See also==
 +
*''[[Curriculum Vitae]]''
  
{{stub}}
 
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
 
*[http://web.mit.edu/biology/www/facultyareas/facresearch/rich.shtml Rich Laboratory website]
 
*[http://web.mit.edu/biology/www/facultyareas/facresearch/rich.shtml Rich Laboratory website]
 
*[[wikipedia:Alexander Rich]]
 
*[[wikipedia:Alexander Rich]]
 +
 +
{{stub}}
  
 
[[Category:Academic Research]]
 
[[Category:Academic Research]]

Latest revision as of 03:36, 27 December 2012

Me at my desk at MIT

The Dr. Alex Rich Laboratory is where I did scientific research during Summer 2002/December 2002. It was located in the Department of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), USA, Summer 2002/December 2002.

Research

In 1979, Rich and co-workers at MIT accidentally grew a crystal of Z-DNA. Because of my research at OSU on Z-DNA and its biological role and because Dr. Rich is one of the leading experts on Z-DNA, I went to work for him at MIT.

In order to further study the biological role of Z-DNA in the regulation of transcription in various organisms, an experiment was designed to test just this. I ran a microarray of all open reading frames (ORFs) in yeast and measured the role of those ORFs having Zα-binding protein in solution (which should bind near their transcriptional start sites, if our hypothesis is correct) against the wild type. These were run on Affymetrix GeneChips and analyzed with proprietary software from Affymetrix.

Our collaboration resulted in a paper published on Z-DNA and a possible biological role:

  • P. Christoph Champ, Sandor Maurice, Jeffery M. Vargason, Tracy Camp, and P. Shing Ho (2004). "Distributions of Z-DNA and nuclear factor I in human chromosome 22: a model for coupled transcriptional regulation". Nucleic Acids Research, 32(22):6501-6510.

See also

External links

This article is curently a "stub". This means it is an incomplete article needing further elaboration.

I always welcome suggestions, comments, and criticism. If you have something to contribute to this site, please follow this link: Contributing Information. Thank you!