News Release
June 12, 2007
Contact: Kristina Goodnough, 860-679-3700
e-mail:
goodnough@nso.uchc.edu
$2 Million Imaging Machine Approved for UConn
Health Center
Farmington, Conn. - The Health Center has received a $2 million
federal grant to purchase a sophisticated imaging machine to study the
structure, stability and dynamics of proteins and their role in human
disease.
The instrument, an 800 MHz nuclear magnetic resonance
spectrometer, will be used by researchers at the Health Center and
Storrs campuses of UConn and by researchers at UMass (Amherst),
Connecticut College, Dartmouth College, Wesleyan and Yale
Universities.
“Proteins are not static,” says Jeffrey Hoch, Ph.D., associate
professor of molecular, microbial and structural biology and
principal investigator of the grant. “They undergo internal motions
spanning many orders of magnitude in rate and amplitude. Nuclear
magnetic resonance is a powerful tool for probing those dynamics,
detailing both the extent and timescale of internal motions,” he
says. “It is also a uniquely versatile tool for determining
molecular structure and probing interactions between molecules.”
Understanding the three-dimensional structure of proteins is
helpful for understanding their biological function and for
designing biochemical experiments, says Hoch. Ultimately, the goal
is to be able to use understanding of the structure and function of
protein to design effective drugs or other approaches for treating
disease. Researchers at the Health Center will use the instrument to
investigate proteins associated with cancer, infectious disease and
essential biological processes.
The grant is one of 14 provided by the NIH National Center for
Research Resources High End Instrumentation Program, which is
designed to provide essential cutting edge equipment to advance
biomedical research and increase knowledge of the underlying causes
of human disease. The program provides grants to support the
purchase of sophisticated instruments costing more than $750,000.
“These high performance imaging instruments and other advanced
technologies enable both basic discoveries that shed light on the
underlying causes of disease and the development of novel therapies
to treat them,” says Barbara Alving, M.D., director of the National
Center for Research Resources. “The value of this investment in
advanced equipment is greatly leveraged because each of these rare
tools is used by a number of investigators, advancing a broad range
of research projects.”
The Health Center’s NMR Structural Biology Facility currently
houses spectrometers operating at 400, 500, and 600 MHz. The new
instrument will allow investigation of larger, more complex systems
through its improved resolution and sensitivity, says Hoch. It is
expected that the new instrument will be operational in 2008.
The University of Connecticut Health Center includes the schools of
medicine and dental medicine, John Dempsey Hospital, the UConn Medical
Group and University Dentists. Founded in 1961, the Health Center
pursues a mission of providing outstanding health care education in an
environment of exemplary patient care, research and public service. To
learn more about the UConn Health Center, visit our website at
www.uchc.edu.
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