A team of scientists from the University of Saskatchewan, Canada, has recently demonstrated that chemical agents capable of reducing disulfide (S-S) bonds can be potentially used as antiviral drugs ...
The new method of doping allowed the team to change the oxygen content of the superconductor over a much wider range than was previously possible, and even to switch it from being hole-doped to ...
When biochemists want to break disulfide bonds within or between molecules, they add dithiothreitol to their buffer solutions. Now researchers describe an easy-to-make alternative to the small ...
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